Are the beastee dee rings anything other than a rope attachment point to the tarp and/or a hole for a porch mode pole? I can't seem to find a video that would suggest you could use them as a line tensioner but some prefer them to lineloc?
Are the beastee dee rings anything other than a rope attachment point to the tarp and/or a hole for a porch mode pole? I can't seem to find a video that would suggest you could use them as a line tensioner but some prefer them to lineloc?
Pretty much. HG offers either on their tarps.
For any of my tarps with Beastee-D, that gives me some flexiblity in terms of how they connect. I've used a lot of different solutions, but the one that I found works best for me is functionally the same as LineLoc, and yet are detachable. You can also tie a loop of shock cord to them for insurance against ripping the tarp and use something else to attach your guy lines to the shock cord. Here's what I am currently using:
Line Lock Hook for 1.5 to 2.5mm Cord | Camping Hardware (dutchwaregear.com)
Iceman857
"An optimist is a man who plants two acorns and buys a hammock" - Jean de Lattre de Tassigny (French Army General in WWII)
Those Beastee-D holes are also used as the terminal point for interior pole mods. Instead of running a pole over the ridgeline and to the side panel-pulls, a longer, flexible, shock-corded, pole is arced inside the tarp, forming an arch with pole ends placed inside those Beastee holes.
In order to see what few have seen, you must go where few have gone. And DO what few have done.
yup, added them to the center points of my Amok tarp, works great
Wu77E7v.jpg
NxKr6il.jpg
Iceman857
"An optimist is a man who plants two acorns and buys a hammock" - Jean de Lattre de Tassigny (French Army General in WWII)
the poles were the same length as the width of the tarp
it really helps keeping the tarp from bouncing off your head/feet when the wind is up
Bookmarks