A great winter tent for
"A great winter tent for weight, size, and use"
MSR
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Includes: Tent body, rainfly, poles, 8 Groundhog™ stakes, guy lines, easy-load, wide-mouth stuff sack, setup instructions.
Compatible with the Universal 1 Person Large Footprint, sold separately
Easton® and Syclone™ trademarks are owned by Easton® Technical Products
Overall rating: 4.3157897 / 5 from 19 reviews.
Review topics: ["weather","fabric","height","problem","heat","rain","conditions","tent","wind","condensation","poles","snow","footprint","missions","door","pros","gear","trips","access","inch","choice"].
"A great winter tent for weight, size, and use"
"The Good: pretty light (<4 lbs with stakes for every guy line), very wind resistant, roomy for 1, easy to pitch. The Bad: poor ventilation (one small mesh triangle in the door), no mosquito net door. The Ugly: POLES. Aware of the pole fragility issue I have been very careful setting up the tent. But, the female ends were frayed almost immediately so I reinforced all of them with strapping tape to avoid shattering. Sufficed for 2 one night trips. On the third one night trip the cross pole snapped at the hub right where the end of the male end was inserted into the female end. Did not happen when I pitched the tent, nor that night. It happened the following day when the tent remained pitched while I climbed a peak. Completely broken. Cannot use an aluminum pole splint in that position as there is no way to get one on without cutting the shock cord. Fortunate it was only a one night trip. I kluged together a repair when I got home but doubt it will last. Bottom line: Nice tent but with terrible poles that I have absolutely no trust in. Totally broken on the 3rd one night outing. Please return to aluminum even if it weighs 2 oz more. I will likely have to pay $250 for a new set of fragile poles."
"I use this tent for winter camping in high winds at altitude, and its performance and comfort are superior in every way. A fantastic piece of gear for serious adventurers needing a solid tent for the worst wind and cold."
"I have used this tent on several hikes. Just completed a 8 day thru-hike of the NPT. One of my tent pole ends broke on the last day. I am in the process of using the Cascade repair shop. This tent has been my go to this Fall."
"Would be nice if body of tent had tie outs in the middle of tent to expand/ tighten floor space. A few more inches across would have helped instead of 30” 35 would have been much better. For a few more ounces would be worth it. Frankly seperate poles would be lighter than the hub design most companies use now, and less likely to to have issues. 70 year old gear head."
"I slept in this Access 1 at 11.5K last weekend and it snowed 8 inches and went down to probably 10F on a backpack trip. My buddy slept in the Access 2. The pros: Warm, no wasted area needed to heat up, light, easy set up, snow falls right off. Good head height for chilling inside in a storm or cooking. The Cons: I wish the door had a larger zipper mesh door, I would sacrifice the extra ounces to relieve some condensation which is why I didn't buy the Advance pro. The first night it was below freezing and no snow and no condensation though. I might try sleeping with a surgical mask on. The sides seem like the poles are pulling on the tent going in instead of straight down, could use an inch more on each side where the poles connect probably. I am 5'11 so if you are over 6 ft look for a longer tent as this won't work unless you sleep in a fetal position on your side. Overall I am happy with this tent choice I made and will enjoy it on some winter ski tours, but I am used to a small space with my Tarptent Aeon Li for summer lightweight long missions. Also have a Copper Spur 2 for spacious shorter trips."
"Great tent!"
"For me, the most intuitive tent wins. I want the tent up and ready in 1 minute at the end of the day, especially when the weather is bad. I tested this tent out on Mt. Hood, the North Cascades, and a whole summer in Rifle Canyon. It saw wind, rain, hail, and a thunderstorm. I had the tent set up with numb fingers. It passes the test on every occasion!"
"Its great for snow . I love it"
"When it comes to 4-season tents you have a choice of 9lb+ porta-caves (e.g. the Trango) or 3-4lb treeline tents such as the MSR Access that will support a foot or two of snow and withstand serious wind. The Access makes good compromises to keep the weight respectable without "stupid light" choices such as mesh body or 10D fabrics (yes, I am talking about the Slingfin Portal). It is reasonably easy to set up, can be pitched fly first without contortions with the optional footprint, uses robust fabrics, and has copious guy points. But it is far from perfect. Unlike the Hubba NX1, which seems targeted at hobbits with its 36 inch peak height, the Access 1 is 40 inches tall. However, it insists on maintaining the unreasonably short 84 inch inner. If you are 6 ft or over your head and feet will touch the inner walls, and the unavoidable condensation there will get your sleeping bag damp. Not sure why MSR does this, it makes no sense other than to allow them to use universal footprints. This is a particularly significant oversight for this type of tent, where warmer days allowing to dry out your sleeping bag may be limited. The door on the inner narrows where the torso typically enters and exits. The placement of the seams dictates this choice, and despite that ingress and egress is fairly straightforward ever for someone like me who is not very flexible. There are only two pockets - one at the foot and one at the head. The absence of side pockets in the head and ceiling areas is inexplicable, and frankly inexcusable. Have not yet used it in humid conditions, but the ventilation of the inner is provided by a single small triangular window. In addition to limited ventilation it cannot be covered with a solid panel. Would have loved to see two windows with solid covers. Great that MSR has started using wide mouth stuff sacks, but making that from 30D fabric added a few unnecessary ounces to the packed weight. That is one area where a lighter fabric would have been justified. The poles collapse to a fairly significant length. They don't fall together even, with 1-2 sections sticking out both on top and the bottom and adding 2-3 inches on either side to the pole sack length. This makes the pole sack too long to be stored in a horizontal position in the pack. I am sure MSR has tested this, but bending the Syclone poles is a nerve wracking experience - the plasticky feel makes me think that they will snap at any time. There is no pole sleeve provided - not sure if this means that MSR thinks the poles will never break, or that a sleeve will not be effective if they do."