Roof Top Tents - 4 Season Use?

kilimats

Observer
The old Maggiolina "Adventure" I had was a little different from the new ones. I had what they called a "winter hood" very thin waterproof fabric that went around the sidewalls , the top being fiberglass and insulated, didn't need it. The difference was the way it attached. You first installed a velcro strip to the inner lip of the drip rail of the roof. The the winter hood would fit to that, kind of backwards, with the velcro out to attach to the inner drip rail. When you tightened the drawstring under the tent, the winter hood would tighten up and you would have a little more than an inch of separation between the waterproof outer fabric and the breathable inner fabric. It was confusing, the new Maggiolinas use a much more straightforward system. The concept is the same, to separate the the fabrics so they perform better. I would think you could do this to just about any tent and make it better for cold weather.

I have the airtop tent and a winter hood, it attach with velcro like you describe, what is the new model you're talking about ? i don't see anything on the website
 

Lemsteraak

Adventurer
You are fine, AutoHome simplified all the winter hoods about six or seven years ago. The new hoods are a reflective silver and the old one are a lightweight blue nylon. The old mounting method was a retrofit where you had to modify your tent, the new tents are all set up for the silver hoods from the factory.

What I was trying to explain, unsuccessfully, was that the old method of mounting the winter hoods would not touch the inner fabric and was about two inches outside of the tent's fabric. If you are really going into some sub zero temperatures, may be a bit better. The point is that folks have been going out in really challenging conditions in Maggiolinas for over 50 years and have been coming up with improvements. If you are planning to go out in really challenging conditions, contact the factory and they can help you. They not only build them, they use them.

I've found the Maggiolina is better in cold conditions than the Columbus. The Columbus is simpler and faster to set up. Maggiolina have a fabric that really breathes well and having the top down low keeps the warm air down low. About ten years ago I had an old small Maggiolina Adventure I was taking up to Oregon and stopped for the night high up in the Cascades in winter. Later that night it snowed and when I woke up it was really cold. I had no idea.
 

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