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 REVIEWS 15 / 09 / 03
 

Mountain Hardwear Waypoint Tested

Mountain Hardwear Waypoint 1 Tested

Price: £170

Weight: 960 grammes (claimed minimim weight) 1130 grammes (packed weight)

Features: three-season superlight one-man tent, single main pole and one end pole, single wall design, optional rear strut support, double-slider, venting, water-resistant zip, celing venting, mesh perimiter venting, seamless welding attaching fly to floor, single side entry, UVX window in front. Comes with pegs, guys and Seamgrip seam seal.

Very light, roomy for one person.
Condensation issues and no vestibule.


The Concept Bivvy bags and tarps are light but cramped and often impractical. With the one-person Waypoint - there's also a two-man version - MHW has spent a few extra grammes, with a claimed useable weight of under a kilo and added a bit of general useability along the way.

It's a single-skin tent, which in the UK normally means big condensation problems, but the design uses 'mesh perimiter venting' and other vents to try and minimise the effects. The aim is a pack it and forget it tent, that's very light but still reasonably comfortable.


Features Construction is ostensibly simple single pole with end pole structure plus a PU-coated Nylon outer with added silicone coating on the

The strip above the ground sheet is mesh
for improved ventilation, while the 'fly' runs
down to the ground outside for rain shedding
outside. MHW says that weight for weight, Nylon is more tear resistant than Polyester, which is why they use it.

So far so simple, but there are some neat touches. The most obvious is the use of glueing technology to attach the walls to the seam-sealed bath-tub groundsheet via a continuous mesh venting strip and also creates a rain-shedding external profile - think eaves, or just a conventional two-skin fly sheet construction.

The large side door uses water-resistant zippers to save weight, there's a roof window to minimise claustrophobic feelings and vents both at the foot of the tent, where an optional upright pole allows air flow, and at the head.


In Action First the plus points, the Waypoint packs down very small, pitches very, very quickly and easily - there's just one main pole and the optional vertical end pole. Plus it's nice and big, roomy enough for one person, a pack and associated gubbins.

On top of that, the 'head end' of things is tall enough to avoid the claustrophobic atmosphere of typical bivvy tents and the tapered toe is just high enough to minimise soggy sleeping bag syndrome. Construction shouts 'quality' with everything fitting and working. We liked neat touches like the colour coded zip pull tags on the double-ended main door zip so you actually tell top from bottom.

So far so good, but the news isn't all positive. First - and to be fair, we knew this when we got the tent in - there's no covered porch / vestibule, so cooking in miserable conditions is, well, miserable really and you'll need to bring all your wet kit into the tent with you. In settled summer conditions, it's not an issue. Next, still on the door front, there's no insect mesh to keep inquisitive midgies at bay.

Condensation is a further problem. MHW has tried hard to minimise this with the mesh ventilation strip that runs round between the groundsheet and two main plus one end vents. Unfortunately in certain conditions, the vents simply can't cope and even with the door half open, we woke up to find the walls coated in condensation. That means you have to pack the tent damp, so it's still wet when you put it up next evening, meaning you need an extra 30 minutes to dry it out.

To be fair, on some nights things weren't too bad, it all depends on how humid and how warm or cold it is, but in UK conditions it is an issue and you need to be aware of it. Other minor points are the lack of internal storage pockets and vents which can only be opened from the outside.


Verdict

One OM tester used the Waypoint for cycle touring - because he wasn't cooking in the tent at all, the lack of a vestibule wasn't an issue and the low weight, small pack size, fast pitching, roomy interior and increased comfort over a bivvy bag made it damn near perfect.

In fact add a mesh panel to the door and get rid of the intermittent condensation problems and it would be near perfect for that sort of use. Ah, condensation - it's the bug bear of single-skin tents and despite MHW's cunning mesh strip and multiple vents, still a problem on some nights, though on others - less humid ones - it was much better. Really it's a relative thing - compare it to a normal bivvy tent and it's a step-up, but stick it up against a twin-skin tent and the Waypoint loses out on the dampness issue.

For more general use, the lack of midge-mesh door and absence of porch are both limiting and something you need to consider if you want an all-weather tent - you can open the door and cook out in the open while sitting inside the tent, but it's not ideal.

Ultimately we'd say the Waypoint has many of the advantages of a bivvy bag or tent, but with added comfort, space and ventilation, it's a much nicer place to be. The condensation in some conditions is the price you pay for the weight saving though, and that, together with the lack of porch and insect mesh, means that we'd be inclined to spend a few more grammes and go for a lightweight twin-skin tent for all-weather UK use.

Performance

Value


Mountain Hardwear web site



Pushed for time: Very light, very compact and nicely made, the Waypoint is a roomy step up from a bivvy bag or tent and more protective than a tarp and still pitches fast. Unfortunately the single-skin construction led to sporadic problems with internal condensation and it also lacks both a porch and an insect mesh panel in the door, both factors that limit its useability in UK conditions. Great for cycle touring though.


Know more or want to?

If you'd like to add your own experiences of this product check out our user review system and post your opinions to the world. If you have questions you can mail us direct, ask Richard Gear or try a posting to our gear forum.


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