Did this coupon
work for you?
work for you?
Product Name: | Decathlon Quechua, Self Inflating Camping Mattress, 75" x 26" x 2",1 Person, Blue |
Product Description: | Decathlon Quechua, Self Inflating Camping Mattress, 75 |
Manufacturer: | Decathlon |
Product SKU: | 805147616 |
The link has been copied to the clipboard.
64 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
Update: I was able to resolve the issue on their Facebook page. I felt bad for their CS cuz it was one person answering all the questions flowing through their website. I'll see how the quality goes once the replacement arrive.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Never heard of this before. So it could theoretically fail or not be as good after 200 inflation/deflation?
At 3.7 pounds, this thing is not for backpacking. R-value is impressive at 5.2 light car/motorcycle mountain touring to see the fall colors 👍
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank WestCoastCowboy
Decathlon is a major sporting goods retailer headquartered in France and part of Mulliez Group. They have retail locations across Europe and Asia etc. and until recently two or three stores in San Francisco and Emeryville (moved business to online and wholesale). They pride themselves that they have an in-house product development team to make products better (for each specific price point they are targeting). Overall what I saw and bought, they are better than Coleman.
looks like this is a 4 season self inflating pad where the Costco version is not a self inflating pad and only a 3 season pad. the R value on this one is much higher than the Costco's. Costco's cascade unit is $60 and comes with a pillow whereas this one does not but can be used longer throughout the year. this is what I found looking into camping pads
They integrate design, manufacture and distribution which allows them to really know their products and customers and reduce their costs.
They tried a few years ago (again) to enter the USA market and opened a demo store in San Francisco. It worked really well and they opened a store in Emeryville (near Oakland) on the site of a Toys R Us then another store in San Francisco.
Then the pandemic hit.
They are shifting their distribution to Walmart, Target etc and closed their physical stores.
I would say their products are usually good value with good products much more affordable than REI, Columbia, etc.