![Image](https://i0.wp.com/timtinker.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/HH-test3-scaled.jpg?w=1000&ssl=1)
It is quite understandable that some would think that it is quite inappropriate to make a DIY backpacking tent out of polyester umbrella fabric that has no waterproofing or DWR treatment. Consequently, silnylon is commonly used as an alternative.
I experimented with making tents with this breathing polyester and unlike silnylon the fabric has the advantage of staying taught when wet and cold, forming minimal condensation inside and it dries much more quickly at pack-up time on cold mornings. Both fabrics shed heavy rain quite well as shown in this video tour of my silnylon and polyester pyramid tents during heavy rain.
Given the good performance of of the polyester fabric, I was curious to see how it compared with silnylon with regard to withstanding a hydrostatic head test using a 500mm column of water.
For this testing, I made a sealed tube of the silnylon using RTV silicone rubber as glue. The polyester does not bond so strongly with the silicone rubber, so I first glued the the tube (with silver coating on the outside) with the rubber and then folded the seam back on itself and sewed through it while the rubber was still in a liquid state. I also sealed the stitches from both sides with my DIY seam sealer made from silicone rubber diluted with mineral turpentine. I view the rubber as acting as a sealing gasket rather than as a glue in this situation and the seam did not appear to leak.
I marked a series of line on the tubes at 100mm intervals from the bottom. When ‘filled’ to 500mm level, both fabrics immediately leaked a lot as shown in the video below:
To quantify the leakage rate, I placed a bowl under each tube and collected the drips over 35 minutes and they leaked 24g (polyester) and 32g (silnylon). I think that this shows that polyester is no leakier than silnylon and probably less so. I hasten to add that both make excellent tents for protection from rain or snow, but polyester appears to have many advantages over silnylon.
For more details of my investigation of these issues please see:
https://timtinker.com/polyester-silnylon-hydrostatic-head/
Tim