I realized I have not posted the car to tent I made last Sept. here.
Briefly, the background was that I was given this small trailer with a seriously damaged car top tent about 2 years ago. Even the wood platform needed replaced. I remade the platform not long after getting the trailer. and in Sept, I got moving so I could use it in October for hunting. I was indecisive about materials; use canvas like the original? or go light weight with rip-stop nylon?
After a LOT of thought and consideration, I finally decided to go for a wool tent. I'd considered duplicating the original canvas, or making it lighter with rip stop, but decided after research that the Bedouins and the people living in yurts in Mongolia knew more about tents than Coleman...
I bought new US made Army blankets for materials, that were 85% wool (the current US Army blankets are also this, no longer 100%). I also bought coated rip stop to go over the top sheet to make it more waterproof, no-see-um screen, zippers, and some web belting for the part that attaches to the wood base.
The old tent - looks good from this side:
This was why it had to be replaced:
After rebuilding the platform:
A week of work more or less, with some done after work every night, and I finished with this:
I even got a thick wool rug at a yard sale and cut it to fit inside the platform:
I've had this candle stove for years (made it for small tent hesting)
And I even made provision for the candle stove flue:
The candle stove now uses an alcohol lamp I made so I get nearly 8 hours of run time on it per fill-up. (vs 4 hour votive candles) and more heat by far.
for those interested there are more build details in my camping thread (see sig)
A couple weeks later I was using the tent and candle stove for a week, and in weather that got into the thirties and twenties.
This was MUCH more comfortable than any tent I can recall! no condensation as it breaths better (my only complaint about a TentCot brand, the are tight" and get lots of condensation from your breath...), holds heat better, (regular tents are good at keeping the wet off, but without a heater are just as cold inside as out...)
With the candle stove going it was a LOT warmer still! I never had any cold related sinus issues as I usually do sleeping in the cold.