The perfect CW tent imho. Even with two uprights invading the interior footprint, the footprint itself is quite expansive. As with A-tents, resistance to wind and weather is excellent, the walls of the tent serving as continuous guy lines to take the strain -- without having a spider web of multiple guy lines to trip over outside. This tent should be able to accommodate four men with their kits, no problem; six men possible. Expansive standing height in the middle to accommodate de-kitting, coats and long guns etc.
With the sides of the tent propped up and the interior central footprint cleared for day use, you have quite the roomy fly to sit under, yet only four more poles with their stakes and guy lines (to mention that with only two poles and no guy lines it's still fully functional as a tent only). There's even outside flap windows for a bit of cross-ventilation, and to peek to see if morning muster has started or whatever.
So, when packed up it's merely six poles, four with a guy ropes, and a sack of stakes. The canvas packs as one piece -- not separate sections needing to be attached or detached in deployment. Perfect CW tent, for a unit allowed wagons on the march, that is.
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