Bibler Tents Bombshelter Tents

Bibler Tents Bombshelter Tents 

DESCRIPTION

4-person, 4-season

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-10 of 10  
[Sep 09, 2018]
zakman1153


Strength:

I bought it in 2006 and haven't found any down sides! Awesome tent, great folks at Black Diamond! I was concerned after moving to Arizona & living in totally desert, blazing sun conditions. I called and spoke with customer service and was told not to worry. After 3 years plus of it being set up in full sun I might notice some fading of color and that would be the extent of issues. I've used it since 2009. It's now 2018 and I've had Zero problems!

Weakness:

Absolutely no weaknesses in my experience!

Price Paid:
900.00
Purchased:
New  
Model Year:
2006
OVERALL
RATING
5
[Sep 17, 2002]
RichardG
Backpacker

A very appropriately named tent -- it'll stand up to high winds and heavy rain as well as any tent I've encountered. While Bibler sells it as a four person tent, I consider it a two-person expedition tent, maybe three people in an emergency. No way it'll work for four adults. But for two it's spacious. I really like the built-in vestibules for gear storage. I recently bought an Ahwanee, which is cooler in the summer (and weighs a couple of pounds less), but for cold or rain the Bombshelter's unbeatable. Although I was warned about difficulties in setup and with the poles, I've encountered none. I seam-sealed mine and have never seen a drop of rain inside the tent.

Customer Service

Never used for a tent, but BD has been terrific for other products.

Similar Products Used:

North Face; Moss; Eureka

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Apr 18, 2000]
Sam Avaiusini
Mountaineer

I've used other brands of single walls, and I must say that Biblers reputation was one of the biggest reasons for my purchase of the Bomshelter. It was going to be my tent for a trip to the Alaska Range. I started using it 6 months before the expedition to put it through some testing here in the NW. After a couple of trips I was a bit disappointed with the tent's overall quality. Seam-tape started peeling in a couple of places. Internal pole tie-downs (velcro) were under too much stress and too flimsy to begin with. Both of them pulled out. This problem alone made a great pitch impossible. These may seem like trivial, nit-picky things, but it became clear to me that this was not the best tent for a month-long expedition. One might expect this kinds of problems after extended use, but after a handful of volcanos in the Cascades? I'd look elsewhere before spending $1000 on the Bombshelter.

Similar Products Used:

The North Face, VE-25

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
3
[Apr 18, 2000]
JMR
Car Camper

I bought a Bombshelter a couple of years ago and have been very happy with it. I use the tent mostly for fishing trips - although I have not encountered as severe as weather at altititude, I have been caught several times in very heavy thunderstorms/tornado advisory type weather. The tent has never leaked or felt like it would blow away. My only complaint is the tie downs off the sides of the tent are black - I suggest putting some aluminum foil on them to keep from walking into the damn thimgs at night. Great tent.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Feb 17, 2000]
rmb
Mountaineer

Best 50 sq. foot tent I've ever seen. Only 8 pounds. One huge vestibule and a little one in the back. Inner doors are NOT "mesh" as someone stated below, just VERY lightweight but windproof nylon. Easy setup with 4 poles. Can be set up from inside the tent in a blow without a problem. Great guypoints. You could probably sit on this tent it's so strong.

Perfect size for two large people with tons of expedition down and gear. This is NOT a 4 person tent as advertised. Maybe 3 in a pinch.

A bit pricey but in this case you get what you pay for....

Similar Products Used:

Bibler Fitzroy
TNF VE-25
Walrus Warp/2
Bibler Tripod Bivy

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jan 07, 2000]
Mikey Evans
Mountaineer

My custom bombshelter is all the tent I could ever ask for. With the side skylights and two large vestibules, it's perfect for four in sun, rain, wind, and snow. Hand sewn to perfection and taped by the factory means that there's little for you to do but sign the check. If big is what you need and burly is the only thing acceptable, the bombshelter is the tent for you.

Customer Service

Todd and the boys are great about dealing with repairs and very personable with their customers. If something every does go wrong, getting it fixed will be the easiest "complaint" I'll ever have to make.

Similar Products Used:

I've used Eureka's Summit, Kelty's Expedition, Garuda's Kaja, and Sierra Designs Stretch Dome Exp., and the bombshelter out performs them all.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 22, 1999]
David
Mountaineer

This is Todd Bibler's biggest and most expensive tent. It is a basecamp shelter and expedition tent for high winds and winter! An unusual design feature is that the vestibles are integral to the tent and must be closed to seal the tent because the inner doors are mesh netting. Like all Bibler tents, the poles go up on the inside which is good for storms!

Customer Service

Bibler is now owned by Black Diamond of Salt Lake, UT and I expect very high service from BDEL.

Similar Products Used:

The North Face VE-25 is another large expedition tent but weighs more because of two wall design.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[May 21, 2001]
Sverri Warm
Skier

I used this tent during a crossing of he Ice Cap of Greenland during April 10 - May 10 2001. The tent was great, but it showed several weaknesses:
1. Ice forming on the inside could not easily be removed
2. The spring cord inside the poles had to be shortened several time due to freezing moisture
3. The pole for the main vestibule was not easy to insert with gloves
4. The inside textile of Todd-Tex could freeze tightly together and we had a sepearation of the laminate on one spot

In general the tent gives sufficient space for two people under arctic conditions, not more! It is extremely wind proof and comfortable during bad weather, but you will have snow drift in the vestibule if you cannot find ways to close the vents. This depends on wind directions and turbulence, put a sock in a plasctic bag and stuff it into the vents during night when needed, otherwise its digging inside the tent the whole morning. It is definitive a bombshelter.

All things considered it is a good tent, but the separation of the textile i did not like at all. Check for other tens, considering the price.

Customer Service

Not much, except that Bibler does not accept that there are intrinsic problems with the Todd-Text during long arctic expeditions, where you heat water inside the tent (which is the best way under exact such expeditions). Ventilate as much as possible, take extra fuel for heating with you, never let the fabric get abowe freezing point and then refreeze when packed (it will freeze too tight together and cause delamination when setting up the tent).

Similar Products Used:

Helsport Isfjell
Hilleberg Namatj

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Dec 14, 2000]
Kevin
Mountaineer

I received the first (or close to it) Bombshelter with two built in vestibuls from the assembly line.

In general the tent is completely roomy for two people and terrific when set up. It can withstand 100 mph winds when other tents blow apart, I've done it.

The pockets inside are weak and must be taken care of. The velcro used to tie the poles down are to short for real people. My fingers don't work well with them, how about another 1" long. After about 2 years the tent has shrunk a little and the poles never are straight anymore, they wind around inside from side to side. On Aconguaga in 1999 the tend shreaded when attempting to put it up at high altitude. Sent it back to black diamond and they fixed it up for free (though Todd Bibler may not have wanted to). One of the poles failed on a trip. Wet cold condensation in the morning can make this thing weight about 15 pounds which is normal for a bibler tent. The bag it comes with is to darn small after unpacking, buy another bag instead. The place the poles sit in fail badly after awhile so that replacement slots for the vestibule poles are necessary (I rigged something up). Four people? you have got to be kidding, 2 and 2 expedition packs and this is a hotel.

After all this complaining you would wonder what I think of this tent. I have taken it on about 10 expeditions to South America and Alaska, driven the tent hard in extreme altitude and weather, lived in it for months, and
packed it on many mules and donkeys.

To date this has been the BEST DAMN TENT I have ever had. If you can get it set up it will hold up to anything the weather can throw at it. Get yellow, green is depressing after awhile.

Now I have a Bibler Elderado to climb with also. Lets see how it holds up to real expeditions over the next 5 years.

regards

kevin russell

Customer Service

The customer service at Black Diamond is good. They take it back, even if they think it was your fault, and fix it.

Similar Products Used:

Bibler Elderado
VE25
You Name It.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 21, 1999]
Adrian Burke
Mountaineer

The Bombshelter is exactly what it claims to be... a bombshelter. We used a bombshelter on Denali in 1998, all the way up to 14,000 camp. It withstood very high winds without any difficulty. I kept us relatively warm and we could enter and exit without too much loss of warm air. The vestibule was somewhat small for cooking in, but worked well enough when we dug a small pit in the entranceway.
My only structural complaint about the Bombshelter is the same complaint I have with all single-walled tents. It builds up a large amount of frozen condensation overnight. We would wake up to frost covered walls, which snowed down on us as soon as we started shuffling about. Other than that, it was a great tent.
The bombshelter is also quite expensive. It is the *primo* tent and has a *primo* cost.

Similar Products Used:

Bibler I-Tent

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
Showing 1-10 of 10  

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