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Author Topic: parachute tee pee  (Read 10718 times)

Offline Wild Bill

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Re: parachute tee pee
« Reply #15 on: March 01, 2010, 04:59:15 PM »
I used to be a military survival instructor. We used parachutes to build tee pees. My advice, buy one or forget about the idea. Its a lot of hassle for which a lot can go wrong or be done wrong.

One thing, you need (if i remember right) 24 gores of a round chute, of which I'd venture to say that 99% of rounds are porous. Meaning microscopic holes, requiring the material to be stretched drum tight to have any water resistant characteristics. Approximately one tug away from O $h!t, i ripped it! :bash:

With these rounds, you need to remove all the inner parallel lines from the chute. Not doing so will not allow the material to stretch.

You'll need anywhere from 15-25 pop can sized round poles about 30 feet long. The variance depends on the season (snow= more poles).

You'll need what Native Americans used to call "whale bones". These are used to keep the parachute from slipping, loosing its tightness.

Due to the chute being porous, the structure will need to be erected at approximately 60 degrees to have any ability to shed water.


Some things to be aware of. Square chutes will not work. Although they are non porous (typically) they are square. Tee pee's are round ;)

If your lucky enough to find a round nonporous chute, its likely to cost a bunch as the shelf life on such a creature is rather long.

These shelters are cool, but cramped, hard to maintain (they need tightend up about every three days) and generally a pain. Also, note that heat rises. Tee pees are tall. Good summer shelter. Poor for the winter.

My two cents again. Cool for the kids, rather neat to see, needlessly cramped, a pain to erect/ maintain. Buy a tent, or a good sill tarp.
Bill

Offline Sportfury

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Re: parachute tee pee
« Reply #16 on: March 13, 2010, 07:12:40 PM »
Thought this post was interesting and did a search on silicone impregnated ripstop nylon. I came up with a company that is local http://www.seattlefabrics.com/nylons.html. They sell 1.9 oz impregnated ripstop nylon with a 16-18 lb tear strength for $8.50 a yard. The only thing I didn't care for was the colors that this comes in. They also have polyurethane coated ripstop with a lot more color options, but he tear strength is only 8-10 lbs.

I went to the products page and they have a lot of interesting stuff http://www.seattlefabrics.com/products.html
« Last Edit: March 13, 2010, 07:25:22 PM by Sportfury »

Offline JackOfAllTrades

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Re: parachute tee pee
« Reply #17 on: March 13, 2010, 10:16:42 PM »
Realize that most Nylon will stretch. That's the problem with ripstop nylon whether impregnated with any sort of water repelency or not. Note that most quality rain flys on hiker tents are made of ripstop polyester. Polyester doesn't stretch near as much.

-Steve
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Offline huskyrunnr

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Re: parachute tee pee
« Reply #18 on: June 03, 2010, 08:23:26 AM »
A bit late to the thread, I only now stumbled upon this website.  I base camp w/ a 'chute tipi I made.  I use mine mostly during the time of year when precip. is the frozen kind, but I've had it out in some decent summer T-storms too.  I treat the silk w/ camp-kote about once a year.  Ti-goat used to make tipis out of DWR treated nylon and I have one of those as well.  I haven't had a problem with either tipi getting my gear wet.  The last image, I had added guyouts up the wall which allow to really stretch the tipi.  I should check if there is a pic limit on this site.  Happy trails...








Offline Wild Bill

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Re: parachute tee pee
« Reply #19 on: June 04, 2010, 04:29:01 PM »
Thats a pretty slick gig... Whish they would have let us do that :rolleyes:

 


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