Hey all, back again with another review. This time it’s for
my Eureka ICS 2000 Improved Combat Shelter one man tent. NSN 8340-01-535-0134
(woodland). I picked mine up on ebay
this past winter. My plan for its use is to take with me on solo overnighters,
canoeing or longer solo trips. In the
past I have been basically a “tarp tent” camper. Basically I used a GI poncho
stretched out as a cover and lay under it with my gear. In the military we call this a "hooch". It worked for me all
during my Military career and so I took the skill with me. What this tent gives
me is the portability of a tarp set up with the option of element protection
that comes from a full tent/rain fly combo, a well as a bonus I will get in to at the end.
Here is what you get in the set: You get the ICS 2000 one
person tent, a rainfly big enough to give room for gear, 3 collapsable aluminum
poles, aluminum tent stakes, a ground cloth and a repair kit. This all fits in
one stuff sack, with the repair kit, poles, and stakes each contained in their
own stuff sacks. The stuff sacks (4), tent, fly and ground cloth are all made from
thick nylon.
The facts:
Tent: 2lbs 9.9oz, fly 2lbs 9.1oz, frame 1lb 2.5oz, total
weight 6lbs 6.7oz. Total square feet is
27 feet. Floor measures 100" x 40".
The thick nylon is labeled 70D, 90P, polyurethane coated
ripstop nylon. It’s thick durable stuff and should hold up to normal wear for a
good long time. Remember these were designed for the military so they have to
be tough. The inner side of the fly and the "front door" side of the tent are coated in a black out material that
helps keep the tent dark enough to sleep in even during the day. Plenty of
ventilation is provided by lots of no see um mesh. You can see in the pics my 3
hooligans looking out the side of the tent behind a layer of the mesh. There
are also mesh panels on the roof of the tent as well, which should help
minimize condensation under the fly. The height of the tent is 32.5” +/- 1 inch,
the peak being right in the middle of the structure. Windows and entry points
on both sides of the tent body and a bath tub style floor.
Thanks to clip hooks the cross pole set up is fast and easy. You can see them a little bit in the bottom 2 pictures.
Thanks to clip hooks the cross pole set up is fast and easy. You can see them a little bit in the bottom 2 pictures.
pic above is the "back door"
Now for the bonus…I can still tarp tent it if I choose! Nothing
beats the ventilation and closeness to nature you feel under a tarp set up
except sleeping right out under the stars. By using the ground cloth and the
rainfly and tent poles I can bring about half the set out and have a very light
weight shelter to set up quickly and spend the night. Adding the tent stakes
will make it very stable and free standing. In the picture below I think I didn’t
quite have the poles set right but you can get the idea of what it would look
like.
rain fly and ground cloth set up as a "hooch"
You can see how small it packs down to. I used the same
32oz. Nalgene I have used in other reviews to show scale. I also have added my
Platypus gravity water filter in the pics to add further size comparison. It looks kind of big but it really isn't. I can get it and my summer MSS sleeping bag in an MSS carrier easily.
Hope you enjoyed this review, as always comments welcome!