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Cat Supplies > LitterMaid Cat Privacy Tent

LitterMaid Cat Privacy Tent

by Pet Health on June 29, 2010

LitterMaid Cat Privacy Tent

  • Fits LitterMaid self-cleaning cat boxes and most other cat boxes
  • Provides roomy privacy for cat with or without litter box
  • Six sides keep litter confined to box area; unzips for easy access
  • Made of waterproof vinyl; cleans with soapy water
  • 29 inches long, 18-1/2 inches wide, 16-3/4 inches high

Product Description
Six covered sides keep litter confined to box. Privacy provides complete, roomy privacy for cat. Washable cover unzips for easy access to litter refills and cleaning. Door flaps snap open for convenience. Easy to assemble plastic fan.Amazon.com Review
Designed to fit around LitterMaid's self-cleaning litter boxes (or any litter box), this roomy tent provides tabby with privacy and can be set up as a den for play and sleep even without a litter box inside. It's made of waterproof vinyl and can be wiped out with a damp cloth or washed in warm, soapy water. Used around a litter box, the six-sided tent confines litter to the box and keeps it from being scattered around. It unzips all the way around to provide easy access for a litter box to be refilled or cleaned. The tent measures 29 inches long, 18-1/2 inches wide, and 16-3/4 inches high and assembles easily without tools (instructions included). --Fred Brack

LitterMaid Cat Privacy Tent

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

chris bond June 29, 2010 at 6:40 am

I agree completely with the other reviewers regarding the flimsy quality of the support posts for the tent. In addition, our zipper broke, and as the tent itself is plastic there was no easy way to simply replace the zipper without tearing up the tent itself.

I do disagree with those who say the tent is useless. Once you’ve gotten a feel for how much litter is “too much”, you rarely have to actually see into the tent itself for anything other than adding litter. The only problems I’ve ever encountered were that our cat had decided to “prefer” one side over the other, resulting in a mountain of litter in one half of the box that the motor for the scoop just couldn’t handle. After 3 or 4 retries, it just stops and waits for the next cycle. Such problems are easily resolved by taking our “old-fashoned” litter scoop and shoving the litter around, then switching the unit off and on again and seeing if the rake makes it through the cycle. None of this is impaired by the presence of the tent. Adding litter is a bit of a pain – it would help if there was a snapping flap of some sort on the top.

Meanwhile, the tent really does signifigantly improve the odor situation. But the most important thing, at least for our cat, is that without the tent she tends to ignore the ramp and jump out of the box directly, leading to litter all over the vicinity. The tent prevents this, and the carpeted ramp does a pretty good job of preventing litter from going everywhere.

We haven’t found a good replacement for the tent yet, and I’m loathe to spend 30 bucks for such poor quality. But as I noted in my title, this is not a review of the actual littermaid system – We got ours almost 3 years ago and (tent issues aside) it’s worked great! I’d hate to go back to scooping. One recomendation – use a plastic grocery store bag as a liner for the little plastic container, then just throw away the liner and stop buying new containers!

RK June 29, 2010 at 8:02 am

We love the LitterMaid litterbox but the tent is beyond bad. Everything about it is of poor quality. The zipper breaks easily and is difficult to zip up because the plastic tent is slightly undersized for the tent structure formed by cheap plastic rods… Flimsy to the core, the plastic rods met their death when our average sized 10 lb cat decided to explore the universe from the top of the tent.

The concept is great — privacy for the cats, spares us of seeing them do their thing, and it helps with the odor. …

Karen Honeycutt June 29, 2010 at 8:59 am

OK, I know that’s a non sequitur, but that should give you an idea of how useless this product is. I got this tent free when I bought the mega Littermaid litter box (which, despite some problems, I love). The tent comes with no instructions but the plastic pieces that support the tent fit together like Tinker Toys. (I’m not mechanical at all, but figured it out.) Once you get the plastic frame together, though, getting the tent over it is no easy task; the tent seems to be just a tad too small to fit well over the frame. I was frustrated enough at this, but once I figured I would have to remove the tent every time I wanted to change the plastic waste container in the Littermaid, I gave up entirely. The tent is currently taking up space in my garage. I ended up buying a custom-built plywood carpet-covered container that’s big enough for both the Littermaid and the ramp. It has a lift-off lid and an opening for my two kitties, and it keeps virtually everything (including odor) contained — I would recommend a unit like that over this flimsy tent.

Mrmxwll June 29, 2010 at 10:26 am

the privacy tent is a very clever item.
well made, out of good materials, but highly impractical.

the privacy issue with your cat is much less an issue than
being able to keep the electronic cat box clean and working
properly.
this tent makes it virtually impossible to see what’s happened
in the box, and to smooth the litter around now and then.
this is something you’ll need to be able to do.

i bought it, but wound up lining the bottom with a blanket, and a few toys.
my cats sleep and play in it.

Anonymous June 29, 2010 at 10:33 am

The first time I assembled this, my cat jumped on top of it and the whole thing collapsed. I took it apart and discovered that one of the CHEAP plastic corner connectors had snapped. It’s now held together with duct tape. Does Littermaid expect that cat’s won’t jump up on something like this that’s flat on top and begs to be explored? If they do, then why is the frame made out of such fragile and flimsy plastic?

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