We make the camo metal for Texas Hunter blinds at my work! It’s awesome to see what we run in coil form then trim down into sheet form to the final product in this video
The blind is easy to put up and take down. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxvlQxmcZQzSQSYbJsEgAGvG2DaduKTV99 As a female hunter, the ease of placing and setting up the blind is a plus. It’s more of a wind barrier than a warm quilted blind. Which makes it a lot lighter than our quilted blind. I enjoyed the larger windows/openings. Made for a successful season. It has held up well for the first season and the stitching looks good.
Is it a good bind, yes. But for that money it's ridiculous. Google southern outdoor technologies. They have a variety of fiberglass blinds that are reasonably priced. Not as fancy, but you can add things like carpeting etc. And have a great blind. I bought 2 and am very satisfied with the quality. -just saying!
Do you need to add anchor cables out from 4-corners to the ground, or is the 4' and (more so) the 8' stable enough to withstand strong wind without toppling over?
$4500 wow. Maybe awesome for those with lots of cash or the money farms. A quiet warm blind is really nice for those long hunts. The blinds I've made for me are designed very tall so an archer can stand and draw their bow. This guys blind is super well made and should last many years.
That's a great blind for southern states but would rust in a matter of a few years due to wind, rain & snow. I'd also worry about the flat roof; would it hold 2 or 3 feet of snow and ice?
Just looking at your stands i can see one major problem and i would NEVER buy one untill you listen to me and fix it, i hunt in wisconsin and we get snow all winter and i know that roof won’t hold 100’s of pounds of snow . Pitch your roofs or your customers will be buying one every year just saying ps no reason you can give will hold hundreds of wet snow good luck
@@anthonythorp7291 I'm in ohio we dont get much snow and my blind I built is 8 long 4 wide and the back is 6 ft and front is 7 ft it sheds water and snow like crazy lol.
With all the walls being of aluminum for rust prevention, WHY would they use galvanized steel for the roof?
We make the camo metal for Texas Hunter blinds at my work! It’s awesome to see what we run in coil form then trim down into sheet form to the final product in this video
$4500.00? get out! I will go by a damn shed from Home Depot and put a "hunting shelf in that"
Wtf I can get a 360 blind bow and gun windows insulated carpeted smoked windows and critter proof lifetime warranty for 2700
How do u shoot a bo out of it
Awesome product, but $4500? Me: NOT happening. I'm fine with making a profit, but this price seems outrageous.
The blind is easy to put up and take down. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxvlQxmcZQzSQSYbJsEgAGvG2DaduKTV99 As a female hunter, the ease of placing and setting up the blind is a plus. It’s more of a wind barrier than a warm quilted blind. Which makes it a lot lighter than our quilted blind. I enjoyed the larger windows/openings. Made for a successful season. It has held up well for the first season and the stitching looks good.
I could build one hell of a blind for the price of this bad boy!! It's a blind for hunters with more dollars than sense!!
Why can't people have money and sense? If you're family is making 20k a month why bother building one?
@@dylanmatter1088 because it's fun. 😀
@@bobbyleglocks1992 I don't find that fun.
@@dylanmatter1088 I'm sure there's a lot of things you don't find fun....
Sounds like someone is jealous
Add a 6” pitched roof and keep the top and sides free of rain ☔️
That is an awesome blind but one begins to wonder what they could build for 4k dollars 🤷♂️
lol its 4k ???????????????/
@@a-ddaigrepont3375 yes 4k lol. You could build a small cabin for that lol
Is it a good bind, yes. But for that money it's ridiculous.
Google southern outdoor technologies. They have a variety of fiberglass blinds that are reasonably priced. Not as fancy, but you can add things like carpeting etc. And have a great blind. I bought 2 and am very satisfied with the quality.
-just saying!
@@martinblack7086 no doubt they are nice but for 4 thousand dollars 😬 I'd rather have a stick built one like a house for half price
4 grand i can build a 12x12 shed with wood stove & solar power lol
A video of construction would be nice...
Do you need to add anchor cables out from 4-corners to the ground, or is the 4' and (more so) the 8' stable enough to withstand strong wind without toppling over?
They say you don't need to but we did anchor it down with cable.
It looks like a sweet blind. If only they had one for bow hunting
$4500 wow. Maybe awesome for those with lots of cash or the money farms. A quiet warm blind is really nice for those long hunts. The blinds I've made for me are designed very tall so an archer can stand and draw their bow. This guys blind is super well made and should last many years.
Very nice blind, a little too pricey $$$.
For $4500, it's nice.
I would never pay 4500
Rather just build one yourself at that point
That's a great blind for southern states but would rust in a matter of a few years due to wind, rain & snow.
I'd also worry about the flat roof; would it hold 2 or 3 feet of snow and ice?
Nope. This thing is rust proof and the roof is slightly pitched just enough that snow on the roof is never a problem
Hahahaha they don't know cold. Nice roomy blind though.
Just looking at your stands i can see one major problem and i would NEVER buy one untill you listen to me and fix it, i hunt in wisconsin and we get snow all winter and i know that roof won’t hold 100’s of pounds of snow . Pitch your roofs or your customers will be buying one every year just saying ps no reason you can give will hold hundreds of wet snow good luck
Go to 4:54 of the video. We actually discuss this. The roof is slightly pitched to address this exact issue.
Slightly pitched won't cut it.
@@anthonythorp7291 I'm in ohio we dont get much snow and my blind I built is 8 long 4 wide and the back is 6 ft and front is 7 ft it sheds water and snow like crazy lol.