• Guest, UPDATE We went through the site migration runbook and completed all steps. We will need to complete the migration next week, but will leave the forums up for the weekend. A few days after maintenance, a major upgrade revision to the forum site will occur.
  • HTML tutorial

What’s the best way to stay warm in my rooftop tent?

Smileyshaun

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

A bag rated 20 deg colder than what you will be sleeping in ( bag ratings are survival ratings not comfort ) fleece or other warm blanket under you and another one for tossing over you . Good thermals , thick socks , sleep with thin gloves on and wear a Beeni . If you keep your extremities warm the rest of your body will stay warmer .
 

rgallant

Rank III

Advocate I

Good sleeping bag and some extra blankets as noted. I am north of you in BC, a small battery operated fan to pull air out really helps with condensation.

If you are looking for heat the chinese diseal heaters work very well - but you then need a battery to run it. A Jackery 240 will run mine, BUT I only use it when I need to be in the tent early to warm up so I can read. And then early in the am so I can dress in a nice warm space.
 

MazeVX

Rank VI
Launch Member

Influencer II

Besides the warm sleeping bags, high insulating mattress and fat dogs, there's another option that makes your tent actually warm...
Chinese air heaters!
Especially if you drive a diesel because you don't need to bring a different fuel.
We have a thread somewhere in the forum but don't hesitate to ask.
 

Alenboyd3

Rank 0

Contributor I

I came across this forum a couple of days ago and it made me curious if there were any heated tents out there so far I've only found one brand that claims to have a heated RTT. This is their website Alpine Heated Tent. Other than that I can't find any other brands doing something like that. I'm curious to see if you guys can find anything else.
 

Sea Diamond

Rank III

Enthusiast III

If your RTT has a fly...ditch it. Usually cold temps are a result of clear skies, so soak up all the solar heat you can. Also...tuck in a blanket on the alum. supports once you’re inside. Crack the windows just enough for air flow. And like everyone is mentioning...a good fart sack ;-)

You'll be snug as a bug...until you rise and shine
 

Tundracamper

Rank VI
Launch Member

Influencer I

I came across this forum a couple of days ago and it made me curious if there were any heated tents out there so far I've only found one brand that claims to have a heated RTT. This is their website Alpine Heated Tent. Other than that I can't find any other brands doing something like that. I'm curious to see if you guys can find anything else.

150 Amp-Hours over 6 hours is 300 Watts of electrical power. I have a small heating pad, the kind you put on your back, that uses almost 50 Watts. My guess is they put a heating pad under the mattress, though I wonder if it will really do much good. Perhaps it just comes with an electric blanket.
 
Last edited:

Contributor I


150 Amp-Hours over 6 hours is 25 Watts of electrical power. I have a small heating pad, the kind you put on your back, that uses almost 50 Watts. My guess is they put a heating pad under the mattress, though I wonder if it will really do much good. Perhaps it just comes with an electric blanket.
I actually just looked into this, they have an AI bot on their website. They use a 12v 300 watt heating element. Honestly sounds like something that’d solve my issue…
 

Contributor I

I suspect they used something similar to one of these 12 Volt Heating Blanket and 12v Heater or a 12 volt heated mattress pad. They are mostly used in the trucking industry but mostly like a heating blanket to keep you warm while sleeping. I have my doubts but keeping warm if you need to be in the tent due to weather but awake
Well I just ordered one! It says it’ll ship out in 45 days, I’ll keep y’all updated if it’s actually worth buying. Worst case scenario I just return it.
 
Top