The End! At least its the end of this wall tent story. I got it out of its canvas bag to clean and air it out, hung it up, and it basically ripped in half. So, the issue was hard core use, at least 500 nights plus of use, a lot of that use normal, but plenty of extreme use too. 2 tornados, multiple nights of 40 plus winds, one widowmaker, lightning storms, evacs to the truck, sun rot from use on beach in the Florida Keys.
The biggest deal was the compromise to use without a rain fly which caused the roof to sun rot which caused the canvas to fail and rip beyond reasonable repair. The reasons to not use a rainfly was the high and constant winds, rainflies tend to whip and flog, tent alone is more manageable. If one is packing gear on horse or mule, the no fly option is a good choice for weight and pack ability. At one point the tent was set in the same location for six months set on pallets with a plywood floor.
The absolute very best floor one can have is smooth creek gravel. If anyone wants to use the pallet floor, I recommend laying out the pallets, screwing plywood into that, then setting up the tent directly including screwing some 1x4 onto the ground flaps to keep wind from blowing under the tent sides. If the tent is in the same place more than a week, setting up on top and allowing air to flow under the pallets, will keep it dryer and relieve some mold issues that can happen when you set pallets on green grass, no worries for a weekend, but if you set up for weeks during hunting season, something to avoid.
Conclusion, the tent was a heck of a deal, it got used hard, even put away wet, and kept going and going, was retired, pulled back out and used, retired, pulled out to repair and ultimately catastrophic failure in the back yard, no campers hurt or even wet.
12x14 Davis Wall Tent (2011-2017)