Thu 1 Mar 2007
This past summer I started doing some serious backpacking along the Appalachian Trail and found myself in need of a solo tent. I read various websites that outlined different styles of lightweight shelters including tarps, bivy sacks, hammocks, and our old friend - the tent. After carefully considering all of my options, I chose the tent based on its ability to keep me and a lot of my stuff dry at the same time, ease in setup, cost efficiency, weight efficiency, and durability. I was extremely selective on weight, which is why I ended up with the Eureka! Solitaire. This tent weighs less than 3 pounds! I’ve outlined the weight of this tent based on my own measurements at home on a good scale.

Weight breakdown:
- Tent Fabric - 958 grams (or 33.8 oz = 2.11 lbs)
- Fiberglass Poles - 226 grams (or 8 oz = 0.5 lbs)
- 8 (Aluminum) Stakes, Cords, etc. - 194 grams (or 6.8 oz = 0.43 lbs)
This tent is single-walled, meaning the “fly” (the fabric layer of protection from the elements including water) is the wall of the tent. It has a screen which runs the length of the tent allowing you to open up the fly and have a screened-in tent area to escape the bugs. That feature is nice, provided you have the time to sit around and do this.
I am 6′7″ so length is something that is very important to me. I found this tent to be just barely long enough for me. I never slept in it during a bad rainstorm, but I would guess if I had, my feet would have got wet from my sleeping bag touching the end of the tent (a problem with single-walled tents). A simple fix is to put a trash bag over the end of the sleeping bag.
The floor of the tent is made of lightweight ripstop nylon, so I brought along a plastic tarp to place under the tent. I know this is bad for weight, but I didn’t want to go poking a hole through my new tent. I have not tried it without the tarp yet, but it should have similar results as other tents which use this type of fabric. Many people opt for a ground cloth of some type.
The poles on this tent are awful. They are made out of fiberglass, not aluminum, which actually makes them heavier by my calculations. Most importantly, it makes them unreliable. I used my poles to setup the tent maybe 15 times, then the smallest pole began to split. I halfway expected it to happen, but it still makes me upset. This could be fixed by replacing with all aluminum. One problem you would have, however, is that the pole bends 180 degrees in about a 3 foot diameter. You would have to shape the aluminum with a slight bend to get it to make that kind of turn.
Bent aluminum poles can be seen in Eureka!’s newest solo tent which is very similar to this tent. The new design also has a plastic window in the head of the tent, which I do not prefer. They’ve also made changes to the guyline configurations which are supposed to help condensation. No word on that yet since I do not own one of these tents.
I really liked this tent when I used it. The main drawbacks are the height (not enough to sit up in or even kneel in), condensation problems from poor ventilation, a bit of a clumsy setup, not free-standing, and the terrible poles. To solve all of these problems I have since got the Eureka! Zeus 1LE which is free-standing, has aluminum poles, is tall enough to sit up in, has improved vents, and even includes really nice vestibule areas on both sides of the tent. This tent is also much easier to get into. I’ll include more info in another review once I get a chance to use it outdoors for awhile.
I give this tent 3 out of 5 stars for almost being something really good. The weight and size are awesome, the poles were just a big screw-up. They took the life of this tent LONG before it was time. My Solitaire went from a tent that would carry me a few years to a tent that lasted a few weeks. It’s a real shame that simple poles are the problem.

November 11th, 2009 at 2:45 pm
Thanks for the review! I do a lot of solo camping, too, and I’d actually never heard of Eureka prior to stumbling upon this website. I currently use a Nemo Gogo EX I picked up this Summer, which I absolutely love. Rather than standard tent poles, it uses an inflatable air beam, which is particularly nice when you get caught in heavy winds. By the way, have you written a review yet for the newer Eureka solo tent you referenced in this review? I’d like to see what your thoughts were on that model. I also see that this review is a bit outdated, so if you’re not still using Eureka, what is your current tent of choice?
-Brooks
Seattle, WA
November 29th, 2009 at 12:02 pm
I haven’t written a full review of the new tent, but I absolutely love it. The new aluminum rods are the way to go. The tent is taller in the center allowing me to sit up if I want, and there are outside vestibules that allow me to keep extra gear dry. I’ve used the tent in a wicked storm on the top of a bald, and it did great. Water did get in the vestibules, but the wind was blowing at least 50mph - nothing is going to stop that.