Re: Current Harrison Tents
My tents are in real good shape, but what I do anyway to keep them virtually dustless
is to add an inner liner, which is merely a very thin polyethylene trashcan liner, and
clothespin it to the top of the tent from the inside. Several such liners weigh next to
nothing and can be thrown away if needed. My kit also includes a few disposable alcohol swabs to deal with finger oil. Never had a dust or goo issue.
Re: Current Harrison Tents
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Drew Wiley
My tents are in real good shape, but what I do anyway to keep them virtually dustless
is to add an inner liner, which is merely a very thin polyethylene trashcan liner, and
clothespin it to the top of the tent from the inside. Several such liners weigh next to
nothing and can be thrown away if needed. My kit also includes a few disposable alcohol swabs to deal with finger oil. Never had a dust or goo issue.
Drew,
Do you find that the plastic bags cause your hands/arms to sweat in warmer times?
Re: Current Harrison Tents
I'd contact Camera Essentials and discuss the problem with them. I recently bought a Harrison tent and the instructions say not to store the tent in the stow bag for extended periods of time. I have a big mesh bag and store mine loosely folded when I'm not traveling. I have a feeling this is related to the fabric problem.
Roger
Re: Current Harrison Tents
My Harrison Pup tent absolutely melted inside after about eight years. It was just a mess of goo. I never left it in a hot car or miss-treated it. I contacted the company and told them about it. They did not even acknowledge the problem and told me I could buy a new one for $200. I will never buy another Harrison tent.
Re: Current Harrison Tents
Drew, I've never had a serious dust issue in thousands of reloads over the years. This is related to the material essentially turning to a rubbery, gooey mush. There have been previous threads about this, but I was hoping to get some up to date info on whether new materials that are more stable are being used. I can only imagine that plastic liners in the field would create huge humidity and sweaty hands problems on hot days. I don't think I would want to chance that due to fingerprints and possibly even sheets sticking together once loaded back into the box.
Roger, Sounds like the phone call I need to make. Thanks.
Robbie, Sounds like exactly the same problem. If I can count on ten years of use at $20.00 per year amortization....that's not too bad. I just don't want to get five years down the road and open the thing to find another nightmare of sticky crud.
Thanks everyone.
Re: Current Harrison Tents
Lenser, That's what really irked me when I contacted them. They never said they were aware of the problem and were working to fix it. They just said it was out of warranty and I was welcome to buy another. I was fortunate that I was not out on a paying job when I needed it most. The melted black plastic, or whatever it is, was really nasty, like tar. It was hard to get off my hands...But I will say, until the meltdown, it was a very good item...If I were small enough I could have lived in it!
Re: Current Harrison Tents
I read somewhere that it was related to having DEET bug repellant on your arms and it melted the coating, but who knows for sure what caused the problem? Hopefully they changed the materials and fixed the problem, it doesn't excuse their poor service though.
In spite of that, I've owned several Harrison tents over the past 3-5 years and none have had the gooey problem and their overall quality seems excellent.
As an alternative, I see some apparently well-made Chinese knock-offs on eBay and I think if you search B&H or one of the Hollywood FILM suppliers there are alternative tents made for 16mm and 35mm film loading that would work for LF film too.
Re: Current Harrison Tents
My old Harrison tent( 6 years old), the black plastic material just began to crumble and peel apart from the Silvery material. It was never left out in the heat or expose to strong sun light or any funky chemicals. I just attribute it to old age and now I am looking for a replacement. And because of that, I am more leery about buying used one just because I don't know how old it really is, and thus how long it'll last before it might crumble apart, again.
Re: Current Harrison Tents
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Frank Petronio
I read somewhere that it was related to having DEET bug repellant on your arms and it melted the coating, but who knows for sure what caused the problem? Hopefully they changed the materials and fixed the problem, it doesn't excuse their poor service though.
In spite of that, I've owned several Harrison tents over the past 3-5 years and none have had the gooey problem and their overall quality seems excellent.
As an alternative, I see some apparently well-made Chinese knock-offs on eBay and I think if you search B&H or one of the Hollywood FILM suppliers there are alternative tents made for 16mm and 35mm film loading that would work for LF film too.
DEET will dissolve many plastics. Many years ago, it completely removed the lettering off the back of a on-camera flash that touched my forehead (or actually transferred it to my forehead..). I had put on the DEET more than 2 hours before that happened...
I've had my Harrison pup tent for 11 years now, stored in the bag, and it is still good except for some scratches on the silver coating.
B+H carries tents by the "Visual Departures" brand in different sizes in the same price range as the Harrison one.