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I just purchased the Cabelas XL cot and spent a couple of nights on it at home for testing purposes. I have the Aire Landing Pad on it as well. It is comfortable, roomy and folds up relatively compact. Purchased it on Ebay for $64 shipped, which is about half off. April will be my first Grand trip without the wife so I won't need a tent unless there is bad weather so I thought I would splurge and sleep comfortably. I also purchased the Teton cot organizer that hangs off the side and holds my glasses, a mug, headlamp and the other items I need to keep off the ground and close by. Hope you find what you are looking for. Have a great trip!
RichH
 
This thread is pretty much in dead horse-beating territory, but I have to agree on the roll-a-cot for anything other than a pack trip. I purchased a pair of the Longhorn roll-a-cots with the sleeping pad sleeve and included sleeping pad last year, and after a couple nights on them, sold my AIRE landing pads because they were heavy, bulky, and superfluous.

Also - MNichols, you're obviously confused about the difference between wood and aluminum, or you're confusing one brand for another. Camptime doesn't make anything out of wood.
 
Roll-a-cots are not made of wood and they do not rot.

Well, I have 2 that have wooden dowels that an aluminum sleeve slides over to make the 2 halves a whole, and it did rot, and subsequently break....



If my word isn't enough, I'd be happy to take a photo and post it......



Perhaps they saw this flaw, and changed the design. I use them in the wall tent on hunting trips now exclusively, they are indeed most comfy, especially with a pad on top, but even without they are just dandy after a day of searching for the elusive, and quite tasty wapati...
 
My bad then. Never seen one, but I’d have to assume that any with wood dowels are rare? I bought my first one back in 1994 and perhaps yours are older?


Roll-a-cots are not made of wood and they do not rot.

Well, I have 2 that have wooden dowels that an aluminum sleeve slides over to make the 2 halves a whole, and it did rot, and subsequently break....



If my word isn't enough, I'd be happy to take a photo and post it......



Perhaps they saw this flaw, and changed the design. I use them in the wall tent on hunting trips now exclusively, they are indeed most comfy, especially with a pad on top, but even without they are just dandy after a day of searching for the elusive, and quite tasty wapati...
 
Back to the Helinox cot lite problem I had.

The video is really nice to watch but I have to agree with Bighorn in that Auzzie Ladies are really strong. No way can I assemble my cot lite like she does.

I ended up emailing Bighorn and he shared his dis assembly tips with me. I put the cot on edge and pushed in with body weight just below the flat part of the leg assembly and was able to pop the legs off. I had been pushing on the flat part at the top of the leg assembly and that does not work for take apart.

Thanks to Bighorn the cot lite is going to stay in my kit and hopefully I can look forward to good nights rest on it and dis assemble it easier each morning.
 
I have both roll-a-cots and the low travelchair sleep rite cots. I got the lower sleep rites for fitting inside my smaller tents, but in general much prefer the higher roll a cots for the reasons others have mentioned.

I really like them for sleeping on the boat, both side by side under the bimini top with my honey and solo with a Thermarest single tent cot that actually mounts on the cot itself. The solo tent also works for traditional ground mounting on either cot, with my dry bag under the cot/tent.
 

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I was worried about this as well but haven't had any issues. The roll-a-cot legs are about an inch in diameter, maybe more, with a plastic or rubber stopper on the bottom. I think under the right circumstances it could wear a hole, but under normal use it's been fine for 2 seasons. I bought some of the plastic disc floor protectors for furniture legs, about 4 inches in diameter, thinking that would help distribute the weight. They are a bit of a hassle and the cot will jump off of them easier than I'd like, so I haven't ended up using them much, although I'm sure they would alleviate any potential problems fairly well if I was just dedicated enough to use them all the time. As a caveat, I mostly use the cots with a middle of the line Coleman with a tarp style floor, rather than a fancy backpacking tent or similar. So the floor is more durable to begin with and the tent isn't super expensive, which means I don't really have much anxiety over it.



I'm curious. For those of you putting cots in tents, how do they affect the floor of the tent? I would be worried that it would wear holes in the floor.
 
I'm curious. For those of you putting cots in tents, how do they affect the floor of the tent? I would be worried that it would wear holes in the floor.
When I have the big six man tent I've put the cot inside with legs on the discs that are made for sliding couches/tables on wood floors. Alternatively tennis balls with a slit in them over the legs works as well. For a smaller tent and two cots, I saw an idea somewhere on here to set the tent up on top of the cots and then Paco pads on the inside.
 
I'm curious. For those of you putting cots in tents, how do they affect the floor of the tent? I would be worried that it would wear holes in the floor.
I've definitely worried about this as well with my Roll a Cot and have a few small holes in my tent from it. I bring some flat planks of wood with a divot drilled in the top (to keep the legs on the wood more easily) now and it works great. Its great for sandy beaches without a tent too...keeps it from sinking. I've slept in the tent with a cot for around 100 days so far (using the wood planks) and no real signs of wearing through. Definitely couldn't say the same if I didn't use them.

I have a Marmot Limelight 3p and it works great for a roll a cot. When I sit on the cot, the top of my head is just clear of the roof of the tent. It has ~18" straight sides on it before curving in, so it works perfect with the cot. I have a few inches on each end of the Cot as well...and could definitely fit the extra long version in it. I've been really happy with the tent, but a few people I recommended it to have not loved it as much as I do.

I've definitely considered calling Camp Time and asking for a new pair of legs for it and cutting a few inches out of them to get a bit more room. I guess I could make my own too. I've seen a few guys who made their own adjustable legs too, which would be sweet. As it stands though...the Cot is more important to me then which tent I use, so I just make sure to purchase a tent that works with the Roll a Cot as it is.
 
The aluminum of the Sleeprite cot legs did put holes in the lightweight floor of my Big Agnes tent when I first set it up on the flagstones in my back yard patio. Doh. Tear-Aid to the rescue. The roll a cots have rubber caps on the legs and are better. I've started putting a sand mat under the tent as a cushion. The tennis ball idea is pure genius. I'd also tried the furniture pads but could never keep the cot on them.
 
I know! I like wider too. I got the roll-a-cot wide but it’s only 32” wide.

I do the tennis balls with a slit too. They look like pac-man trying to gnaw their way up the cot’s legs. I’d like to get fix them so that one of the pair of legs is adjustable in height.
 
Anyone have the 84" long camptime cot? My son is 6'7 so thinking about getting the longer cot for him for our MF trip. They make both a 2 support (just like regular camptime) and 3 support (one in the middle). Trying to decide which one I want. My son is right near the weight limit of 250 lb for the 2 support version so leaning toward 3 support but its more money and more weight so wanted some opinions.
 
Long cot

I've got the long one, with two legs. I'm 6'3" and close to that weight limit too, and the sides definitely bend in noticeably when I'm sitting on it. Less so when I'm laying down on it. I asked the maker about it, and they said it's plenty strong, so I'm just going with it rather than paying to ship it back. If I had it to do over again, I'd probably go with the three leg version.
 
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