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The most striking feature of the Zhota is the central spreader bar which links the 2 diagonal cross poles together. The spreader splits the natural crossing point of these poles increasing the internal head room of the tent by over 20%. The bar also transmits loads, both dynamic like the wind or static like snow, throughout and across the entire pole structure of the tent.
3-4 person tents often find themselves jack of all trades. Be it base camps, advance camps, family camps, the Zhota will take everything you throw at it. The square floor plan gives a versatile area to set out your pads and sleeping bags. The steep side walls rise high above your head before curving nicely into the ceiling giving ample space for 4 or more people to sit in comfort. Pockets along the side walls and hang tabs on the pole junctions give you plenty of options to keep your tent neat and tidy.
The poles of the Zhota are supplied by DAC, probably the most respected pole manufacturer in the market today. Premium aircraft aluminum poles packed full of features make them pound for pound the strongest and most durable poles on the market. Expanded ends combined with DAC Pressfit inserts combine to create a light but strong and reliable pole joint. Soft tip protectors prevent poles damaging each other when they ping together when breaking down a pole. These continual pings together can result in poles splitting or shattering when loaded. Shockcord runs through the length of pole keeping all the component parts together. The pole tips are fixed securely into the poles with a thread allowing you to easily remove it to replace any part of the pole.
A good product is one you don't need to think about because it works just as you want it to.The attention to detail throughout the Alpkit mountain tents is second to none to make sure you can spend every second enjoying the mountains. Every detail has been thought about to maximise its designed use. The quality of every feature on the tents is as good as it can be with todays available technologies. The fabrics are light, yet strong. Every stress point be it a peg loop, guy point or internal hang tab has been reinforced to withstand repeated loadings.
Please NO SALES questions here! use this section to leave feedback about our tents. If you want an answer to a specific question contact us directly through the support section.
Comments
does this tent require a separate footprint?
Also vestibule looks small… potentially wait for further designs>??
Pre-Release Gear Testing - Nia Williams (Friend of Alpkit)
The Zhota was home for a month in the Alps last summer, keeping us cosy through Austrian rainstorms and chilly Ailefroide nights high up in the French Ecrins. Space to stand up proved a treat in Switzerland where it doubled as a bridesmaid’s dressing room. The tent is spacious for two but could comfortably fit four, with generous porches and plenty of inner pouches offering room to stow kit, cook and keep some semblance of order inside. Quick to put up too - I reckon we’ve got the whole process down to sub-five minutes.
Pre-Release Staff Gear Testing - Pete Dollman - Alpkit Product Designer
I’m a self confessed gear tart; the piles of shiny kit stashed in various corners of my house and Alpkit HQ are testament to my ability to blame the machine rather than the man for any performance failures outdoors. Perhaps it’s my ‘product designer’ mindset that makes me question my kit and notice the flaws that would make things work better, perhaps it’s just an ongoing refusing to accept that my own general incompetence could in some way be the root of the issue. Either way I don’t suffer badly thought out equipment gladly, and once I notice the little flaws in a piece of my gear they generally grate at me for a few months before the said piece of kit is condemned to the big drybag in the sky (or more accurately under the bed,) to be replaced by a new shiny version. Having lived in the the Zhota for a month, as well as several shorter trips, gave me more than enough time to get a really good idea of how the tent was to use and live with in a variety of situations and weather conditions, from summer alpine thunder storms to Scottish winter conditions, and more than enough time to start to get annoyed with the niggles, but I still love it! The Zhota’s awesome internal space (thanks to the central ridge and steep side walls) make it a really comfortable place to weather the storms that the beefy SilNylon outer shrugs off, and with loads of places to organise your kit between the pockets and hangtabs it’s really easy to set yourself up with a cushy home from home. Pitched in a waterlogged Austrian field we spent a week hiding from the rain on a kayaking trip and never had any issues with water seeping through the groundsheet (which would of course have been the fault of a pathetically under-spec’d groundsheet, rather than the muppet who decided to pitch his tent in what was, essentially, a bog…) and if you do need to keep moving for bog avoidance or other more sensible reasons the Zhota pitches really easily, in fact once you have the system worked out it’s usually one of the first tents up.
This is a great tent that could be amazing. From the start finding where the four gold poles go through the holes in the sleeves is a faff with no colour for indication and if put up with out going through the loops tend to lift the front up allowing any wind to get underneath. It would be much quicker to be able to fit all the poles it there holes and with the base now under even tension lift and clip into place with ideally brightly colour coded tabes and hooks with clips at the pole intersections. The window is nice in the porch but people can easily see in at all your stuff eather a smaller window or a flap to cover it when you need a bit off privacy this more so when it’s hot and you have the fly vent open. As before brighter coloured pole ends and tabs. It would also be very handy it the ground sheet could fasten to the protector as it tends to come unattached to the inner while trying to erect it. Also tension cords that spread out on the inner tent 4 corners , as we all know trying to get a peg in an area of 4 inches when the ground is hard is a nightmare add a strong wind you are now finding yourself trying to put poles in and hold it down all at the same time add rain and its a nightmare. And finally a small pole emergency repair kit, with the amount of poles you get you need something when one fails plus it helps stop the pole bag blowing away .
I will still enjoy using it
With all that aside it is a great tent loads of room inside to sleep in all 4 directions, loads of pockets, hanging hooks are not only a great feature but well placed and the fly fits on really easy and as you may have read loads of head room. It also hides well in amongst trees and bushs. It’s almost there