It's a good question, and one I'd love to see someone local take the R&D lead on.
Years ago when we bought our canvas tent, friends of ours thought we were nuts. They do a lot of long-range hiking/bushwalking, and couldn't believe we'd buy a canvas tent. In their words - "why would you buy a tent from the 1960s, now?". Their feeling was that materials technology had moved on so much over the last 15 years, why wouldn't we take advantage of that? Our tent is heavy and packs up huge, their tent is super-lightweight and packs up tiny. Their stove collapses and everything packs away in itself. Their clothing is moisture-wicking and temp-controlling.
Hard-core hiking and mountain climbing is kind of like F1 for normal campers - obviously what they buy and use is on the cutting edge and expensive. But eventually things will filter down - look at ABS and traction control in cars, as well as carbon fibre being now widely available.
I love my canvas gear, and it's sturdy, strong and will last given the right care. Canvas can get mould and is highly flammable, and sharp rocks will still tear PVC bases though. I'd love to see someone experiment with some new materials, just to see how far the tech has come. It may not be approachable for "mere mortals" just yet, but it'd be fascinating to find out.
Cheers,
Matto
