Yeah, I see your point about the dust. But I think it聮蝉 less of an issue than you imagine. True, the MSR Hubba Hubba ($280, www.msrcorp.com) has a canopy (inner tent) that is almost entirely mesh. And no, I wouldn聮t think you聮d want to be sitting in that in a dust storm. However, its fly provides pretty full coverage, so it would certainly do a lot to keep dust off the fly. If it聮蝉 windy I can see some dust coming up under the fly, but I shouldn聮t think a lot. And even if it does, the mesh will keep out all but the finest stuff.
Mountain Hardwear聮蝉 Hammerhead 2 ($245, www.mountainhardwear.com) does indeed offer a bit more protection, although you can聮t really seal up all the mesh panels (which also are on the canopy, not the fly, as with the Hubba Hubba). For real dust-proofness you need a 聯convertible” tent, such as Sierra Designs聮 Omega ($289, www.sierradesigns.com). It has zip-out ripstop panels that can be used to cover the mesh, giving you a pretty tight seal against stuff blowing in from the outside. Of course, life is full of trade-offs, and in this case it is somewhat lower ventilation than the Hubba Hubba or the Hammerhead, and more weight (about seven pounds, versus less than five for the Hubba Hubba).
In any event, lots of blowing sand and dust is very, very bad for tents. It erodes the waterproof coating on the fly, clogs zippers, and generally makes a mess of things. So there aren聮t any perfect solutions. Keep the tent as clean as possible, hand-washing it with warm water and mild detergent whenever it gets dirty. Line-dry (never machine-dry). And keep the zippers dry so they don聮t collect crud.
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