Re: Any Mil guys ever use this tent?
These tents are built off the VE24 from the original Pole Sleeve Oval by The North Face. Their design is rigid multiply geodome poles to stand firm to the wind that they do very well. Leaving a tent a couple days and returning to find it buried under snow but still erected means this is a strong design. While I have been in hurricane force winds in Alaska, I have never used a geo in that type of wind. What they do poor is, a lot of extra weight carried for the unusable floor space and lack of head room with the sloping walls. All the poles run through pole sleeves takes calories and time, if in a good blow this can be excruciating calorie and time consuming.
There is a cinch shut hole in the floor that serves multiple purposes; cooking/heating stove and an entry and exit. This hole looks just like the same one seen in pix 4 in the side of the tent. My opinion and recommendation from use in very cold, very windy Alaska climate, not very useful. A hanging stove will get the stove up off the floor of the tent out of the way so less chance of knocking the stove over spilling or burning the floor even with the hole. For an entry and exit for cold and wind; in a blow, the dug tunnel for entry/exit will fill with snow requiring extra calories and time to re-dig it out. Plus wind will find its way down the tunnel and under the tent, this creates an air foil and can cause some concern. The cinch shut door in the side of the tent is a better option but is still a weak spot in the tent. It requires less calories and time to dig out from the main door. As a cold sink hole it does very well, testing has shown a sink hole can allow the main body of a tent to be 10 degrees or so warmer but there are other ways to dig a cold sink hole.
The cinch up door in the side is for entry exit in a hard blow so wind, snow and cold has a harder time finding its way in as you slither through the hole. Plus, multiply tents can be erected side by side connecting the tunnels so to speak for a mini commode post HQ or hotel as some call it.