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Sako
Gear Review
Sako 

Page Type: Gear Review

Manufacturer: NEMO Equipment, Inc.

Your Opinion: 
 - 1 Votes
 

 

Page By: mountainchick7

Created/Edited: Jun 21, 2005 / Jun 21, 2005

Object ID: 1354

Hits: 477 

 


Sako is NEMO Equipment's 2-3 person AirSupported™ tent. Designed for comfortable extended backpacking excursions, Sako is still easy to set up with its fully integrated one piece design using EPIC™ fabric, three mesh doors and four vents for terrific ventilation.



NEMO’s proprietary AirSupported™ Technology relies on low pressure pneumatic airbeams rather than traditional aluminum poles for structure. The technology, developed after three years of research and development, offers unparalleled ease of use with an average set up time of 25 seconds.



Sako is designed for the discerning backpacker who isn’t ready to sacrifice comfort. It’s a streamlined design, with enough space inside for gear, and plenty of headroom.



• Two or three person

• Single wall shell with EPIC* and SilNylon fabric and Dimension-Polyant skeleton

• YKK water-resistant zippers

• AirSupported™ design

• Removable airbeam bladders with quick-disconnect fittings

• Taped floor seams

• Single inflation and deflation point

• Multiple guyout points



NEMO Equipment is a young company based in New Hampshire that takes pride in pioneering a new genre of backcountry shelters that rely on pneumatic airbeams rather than traditional aluminum poles. Founded in April of 2002 by a dedicated bunch of industrial designers with a passion for bold outdoor adventures, NEMO’s earliest projects involved consulting at MIT on a NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts funded project to design new spacesuits for human exploration of Mars. However, as avid rock and ice climbers and backpackers, the team never lost sight of their desire to merge outdoor pursuit with aerospace technology and high design. Learn more about NEMO Equipment at www.nemoequipment.com .








Reviews

Viewing: 1-1 of 1

NoellUntitled Review

Voted 4/5

The Sako Follows the South to Utah!



When I reported a few months back that I’d been witness to a Nemo tent gone bad (I saw one of their tents at the New River Gorge in West Virginia after it had unfortunately experienced a malfunction of some sort and was flat on the ground), the owner of the company contacted me. He offered to let me borrow one of their tents if I were to write a review of it. He informed me that the tent I saw at the New was one of his older models, prior to much innovation, and that the newer models had characteristics that prevented the same malfunction from happening.



My mind was swimming. The very next week I was to leave for a 10 day climbing trip in Maple Canyon Utah. Wouldn’t it be great to be able to borrow a tent to take for the trip! I propositioned Nemo and they accepted. I eagerly awaited the arrival of the Sako tent.



Of course, the countdown to my trip moved about as quickly as a snail on hot payment. Finally, the tent came, and I opened the box in my living room, determined to know everything I needed to know before I was in the wilderness of Utah attemping to blow up the tent in darkness. I laid out the contents of the Fedex box. At first I was a little overwhelmed – thinking, how is little –dis-mechanically-inclined-me going to figure out how to use this air pump and blow up this tent? As soon as I got to work it became easy. Attach pump. Pump. Easy! As the tent took shape, I realized that staking the tent is very important for the tent to have structure and shape. So… some sand bags I use for weighted pull ups, a rocking chair and a door handle were my make shift stakes (the tent had stakes but I wasn’t about to put stakes into my wood floors!) and wha-la! A Sako tent! Sort of. But I knew what to do and went about folding the tent up nice and neat and preparing for departure!



We left for Utah on a Friday. We arrived at our campsite on a Saturday morning, with most of our fellow climbers still slumbering. Sako set up went smoothly, with half a dozen on lookers oogling at the unique tent, asking questions.



Now was the real test. Could the Sake survive the now 9 day climbing trip? Wind, rain, storms… bears… mountain lions… climber filth.



Did it? Yes! Temps varied from down-jacket-temps in the morning to climb-in-bikini-top-weather in the afternoon and the tent survived. Winds got up one night as a brief storm rolled through – and the tent survived. We climbers were in and out and up and down, clean and filthy, sweaty and freezing – and the tent survived.



We had a fantastic trip, and the Sako was a great tent to have with us. It was roomy with a ton of leg room (my almost 6 foot climbing partner appreciated the space for sure) and enough head space to sit up easily and change clothes. It fit easily into our checked baggage (the tent fit into a more compact bag since it doesn't have any poles) and made it back to North Carolina in one piece.







So the next time I see a Nemo tent, I am sure that it’ll handle the roughest of conditions with ease.
Posted Jul 14, 2005 1:11 pm

Viewing: 1-1 of 1


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