• This community needs YOUR help today. With being blacklisted from all ad networks like Adsense or should I say AdNOSense due to our pro 2nd Amendment stance and topic of this commmunity we rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades

Lowes painters tarp to shelter/ tent conversion

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

Joined
May 8, 2017
Messages
241
Reaction score
704
Location
Las Vegas
Roy, you pitched your tent cloth perfectly in that photo. Having been treated, is the fabric at all breathable or does it get plenty hot in there on a warm day? I remember as a kid pitching a surplus olive drab canvas "pup tent" (Dad, infantry, always referred to it as "shelter halves"). We kids piled in there and thought it was so cool ... but it wasn't and we were generally steamed out of there in 10 minutes. This was in the torrid tropical heat of a summer in Tacoma, Washington.
It it is too hot inside leave a 4 inch gap around the bottom.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2021
Messages
1,492
Reaction score
2,287
Location
Trout Country New Zealand
Spontaneous combustion is a serious problem with almost any oil soaked cloth . I once saw a guy open up his new linseed oil soaked canvas sheet to show every one , the thing gave off a puff of smoke and burst into flames as the air ,oxygen , got to it . I have seen oil soaked rags thrown in a drum, almost burn down a workshop and a cloth used to mop up some mutton fat from a barbeque get so hot it melted the plastic bucket it had been placed in . My advice is dont make one , and if you do keep it stored unrolled and out of the house or garage .
I got around the problem by buying a sheet of brown oiled Japara , commonly known as oilskin , sewing leather loops on the corners and one in the top center . This may not be historically correct and may cost more but it is safer and doesn't get sticky in the sun or take years to loose it's smell.
Small stones also work as corner ties and are free and historically correct .
 
Joined
Jan 27, 2008
Messages
25,384
Reaction score
28,438
Location
Republic mo
Mine as a fly. Was at Fort De Charters in November and a rained enough to go-looking
E8AA5FE4-B5D5-455F-9791-1B6B8426EA04.jpeg
9A2AA082-3755-43E6-931C-CAE82B190360.jpeg
7117A6AA-24F7-4935-AD1F-A8FEBB576FEC.jpeg
for animals two by two. But all stayed dry
Made a wedge from some and it to worked fine in a down pour at southwestern in Arkansas muddevous
 

Loyalist Dave

Cannon
Staff member
Moderator
MLF Supporter
Joined
Nov 22, 2011
Messages
14,984
Reaction score
12,051
Location
People's Republic of Maryland
I started with a painters tarp from lowes. 8x12 and the thickest one they had. I washed it in hot water and dried it on high to induce shrinkage. I then cut it to 8x8 and hand sewed the new seam. I soaked it in 50/50 boiled linseed oil and low odor paint thinner. I hung it up for a month to dry. Using 45 caliber balls on all corners and tie downs I added hemp cord. I can use this as a lean to shelter, bed roll, or tent as seen in the picture. Total weight rolled up in a tump line with a blanket is 10 pounds. Two people plus gear easily fit inside the tent. View attachment 182535

I like very much how you did the opening.

LD
 

Loyalist Dave

Cannon
Staff member
Moderator
MLF Supporter
Joined
Nov 22, 2011
Messages
14,984
Reaction score
12,051
Location
People's Republic of Maryland
Spontaneous combustion is a serious problem with almost any oil soaked cloth . I once saw a guy open up his new linseed oil soaked canvas sheet to show every one , the thing gave off a puff of smoke and burst into flames as the air ,oxygen , got to it . I have seen oil soaked rags thrown in a drum, almost burn down a workshop and a cloth used to mop up some mutton fat from a barbeque get so hot it melted the plastic bucket it had been placed in . My advice is dont make one , and if you do keep it stored unrolled and out of the house or garage .

Quite true, but it's the curing of the oil into a polymer, after painting, that gives off the heat and gets hot enough to catch fire in some cases. Once cured the stuff does not spontaneously combust.

LD
 
Joined
May 20, 2009
Messages
8
Reaction score
3
Location
Tejas
That was my first fly seven years ago. But we kept getting heavy rainfalls and I kept getting a mist shower inside. Finally coughed up money for a pre-treated, 10 ounce canvas for plowshare tarp which then became my dining fly when I was able to get into a Panther Primitive 10x10 wall tent. I don't sleep wet anymore!
 

Attachments

  • TY_me_rondy.jpg
    TY_me_rondy.jpg
    3 MB · Views: 0

Latest posts

Top