Motorized Screens & Shade Solutions

Does Mother Nature Spend More Time On Your Patio or Lanai Than You Do?

Protect your outdoor space from hurricanes, bugs, and blazing sun,

so you can enjoy Florida living 365 days a year with a click of a button.

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Cat 5 Certified Screens

You Didn't Buy A Home to Stay Inside

You invested in the patio. The lanai. The view.

But somehow, you're not the one enjoying it.

The sun is relentless. The mosquitoes own the evenings. Every hurricane season brings the same scramble—plywood, panic, and prayers. And that outdoor furniture you splurged on? It's already fading.

Mother Nature has taken over your outdoor space. And every month you don't act, you're paying for square footage you can't use.

It doesn't have to be this way. One button changes everything.

You Didn't Buy A Home to

Stay Inside

You invested in the patio. The lanai. The view.

But somehow, you're not the one enjoying it.

The sun is relentless. The mosquitoes own the evenings. Every hurricane season brings the same scramble—plywood, panic, and prayers. And that outdoor furniture you splurged on? It's already fading.

Mother Nature has taken over your outdoor space. And every month you don't act, you're paying for square footage you can't use.

It doesn't have to be this way. One button changes everything.

One Button. Total Control

Premium motorized screens for every Florida challenge

MagnaTrack Defender Hurricane Screens

Our MagnaTrack Defender Hurricane Screens are rated for a Category-5, offering impact absorption. Storm prep for Patios & Lanais made simple.

Retractable & Motorized Insect and Bug Screens

Do pesky insects evict you from your patio 30 minutes before dusk? Avoid the itch; click a button and watch OneTrack Motorized insect screens deploy.

OneTrack Motorized Solar & Shade Screens

Beat the Heat. Getting chased off your patio or lanai. Our OneTrack Motorized Shade Solutions for patios and lanais blocks up to 80% -97% of harmful UV rays

Fenetex MaxForce Cat-5 Hurricane Screens

Are you worried about a hurricane? Harness the ultimate protection with a click a button & watch the MaxForce Hurricane Screens deploy. Rated for 185+ MPH

One Button. Total Control

Premium motorized screens for every Florida challenge

MagnaTrack Defender Hurricane Screens

Our MagnaTrack Defender Hurricane Screens are rated for a Category-5, offering impact absorption. Storm prep for Patios & Lanais made simple.

Retractable Insect & Bug Screens

Do pesky insects evict you from your patio 30 minutes before dusk? Avoid the itch; click a button and watch OneTrack Motorized insect screens deploy.

OneTrack Motorized Solar & Shade Screens

Beat the Heat. Getting chased off your patio or lanai. Our OneTrack Motorized Shade Solutions for patios and lanais blocks up to 80% -97% of harmful UV rays

Fenetex MaxForce Cat-5 Hurricane Screens

Are you worried about a hurricane? Harness the ultimate protection with a click a button & watch the MaxForce Hurricane Screens deploy. Rated for 185+ MPH

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Your Vision Deserves

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Take Total Control of Your Outdoors.

Block the sun. Light up the nights. The perfect backdrop

Retractable awning with yellow and white striped fabric extended against a clear blue Florida sky — installed by Florida Living Outdoor

Retractable Awnings

Enjoy on-demand sun protection with retractable awnings, offering shade when you need it and open skies when you don't.

Motorized Awnings: Upgrade your outdoor space with motorized awnings, providing effortless sun protection at the touch of a button.

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Landscape Lighting

Light up your home at night with beautiful, customized outdoor landscape lighting from Garden LED Lighting.

It doesn't matter whether you're looking to increase your home's security or boost its curb appeal; our team is here to bring your vision to life.

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Greenwood Composite Fence

Need privacy in your backyard that combines aesthetics with durability and requires very little maintenance?

Welcome to Greenwood Fence. High-quality modern European-style fencing for the residential, commercial

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WHY FLORIDA LIVING OUTDOOR...?

MagnaTrack motorized hurricane screens installed on Florida home exterior for weather protection

At Florida Living Outdoor, we specialize in enhancing, expanding, and protecting your outdoor living spaces, making them more functional and enjoyable. It does not matter if it is an open space, patio, or lanai. We offer top-of-the-line solutions, including motorized retractable screens, sun awnings, and aluminum pergolas.

At Florida Living Outdoor, we understand. When it comes to enhancing your outdoor living spaces or making them more functional, you're not just looking for a product. You are looking for a partner to help complete your vision.

The bottom line is that nobody knows Sun Pro Awnings, MagnaTrack Motorized Screens, and Fenetex Motorized Screens better than Florida Living Outdoor. We are Florida's number one Trusted resource for Motorized Screens and Awnings.

Don't Take Our Word For It.

Here Is What People Are Saying About Florida Living Outdoor.

Take Total Control of Your Outdoors.

Block the sun. Light up the nights. The perfect backdrop

Retractable awning with yellow and white striped fabric extended against a clear blue Florida sky — installed by Florida Living Outdoor

Retractable Awnings

Enjoy on-demand sun protection with retractable awnings, offering shade when you need it and open skies when you don't.

Motorized Awnings: Upgrade your outdoor space with motorized awnings, providing effortless sun protection at the touch of a button.

Garden LED lights illuminating a wooden deck walkway surrounded by lush tropical landscaping at dusk in South Florida

Landscape Lights

Light up your home at night with beautiful, customized outdoor landscape lighting from Garden LED Lighting.

It doesn't matter whether you're looking to increase your home's security or boost its curb appeal; our team is here to bring your vision to life.

Custom horizontal privacy fence in gray composite panels installed above a luxury pool with mosaic tile water features and tropical planters in Florida

Greenwood Composite Fence

Need privacy in your backyard that combines aesthetics with durability and requires very little maintenance?

Welcome to Greenwood Fence. High-quality modern European-style fencing for the residential, commercial

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WHY FLORIDA LIVING OUTDOOR...?

At Florida Living Outdoor, we specialize in enhancing, expanding, and protecting your outdoor living spaces, making them more functional and enjoyable. It does not matter if it is an open space, patio, or lanai. We offer top-of-the-line solutions, including motorized retractable screens, sun awnings, and aluminum pergolas.

Bottom line, we install the products that actually win their job. For Category-5 hurricane protection, the Defender Hurricane Screen by MagnaTrack — built by Progressive Screens, a Hunter Douglas Company, in Sarasota, Florida. For everyday shade, insect, UV, and privacy protection, OneTrack motorized screens — engineered with a patented self-adjusting tension system, welded seams, and UV-stable fabrics made for long-term Florida exposure. For daily-use premium screens that need the patented magnetic-track system, MagnaTrack.

For the full picture of outdoor living — Sun Pro awnings, Azenco-Outdoor pergolas, Greenwood Fence, and Garden LED lighting — all under one veteran-owned roof.

Don't Take Our Word For It.

Here Is What People Are Saying About Florida Living Outdoor.

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Your Vision Deserves

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Who Delivers...

Aluminum Pergolas -Turn Your Patio Into the Room Everyone Wants

An aluminum pergola gives you shade, structure, and a reason to stay outside longer.

White louvered roof pergola covering an outdoor kitchen with built-in grill, TV, and ceiling fan on a Florida patio

Louver Roof Pergolas

Enhance your outdoor space with aluminum pergolas with louvers, This modern pergola idea lets you control sunlight and airflow, creating the perfect ambiance year-round.

A nice spacious 2nd story furniture. With Retractable bug screens providing , beyond that a lake providing protection on a clear shine day. lanai being protected from those pesky pest

Insulated Roof Pergolas

For a cooler, more comfortable outdoor retreat, insulated roof pergolas provide superior protection from heat and rain. This pergola idea blends style and function, making your patio usable in any season.

Modern aluminum carport pergola with LED ambient lighting sheltering a luxury car and golf cart surrounded by tropical Florida landscaping

Car Port and Sun Shades

Protect your vehicles with durable aluminum carports, a sleek and modern alternative to traditional garages, creating curb appeal while shielding your car from the elements.

White aluminum cabanas with louvered panels and curtains lining a luxury rooftop pool with palm trees and South Florida skyline

Aluminum Cabanas

Create a private, resort-style escape with aluminum cabanas, perfect for poolside lounging or outdoor entertaining. This pergola idea combines shade, style, and durability for a luxurious backyard retreat.

The Florida Living Outdoor Advantage

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Luxury Products

Each Awning is designed for Quality and we proudly install only premium grade product that function well in creating those outdoor spaces. MagnaTrack screens are designed to truly enhance your outdoor living experience and deliver trouble-free performance year after year and long-lasting beauty.

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Local Experts

As a family-veteran-owned, faith-based business, our team brings a personal touch to every project. We care. Our goal is to ensure your satisfaction and deliver unmatched service and outdoor luxury spaces.

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Extensive Experience

FL Outdoors possesses a track record of 26 years of serving major clients; our extensive experience speaks for itself. Trust our licensed Class A contractor services for excellence in installation and customer satisfaction.

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Superior Service

At Florida Living Outdoor, white-glove service is our hallmark. Your job is to dream and let us create a smile. We prioritize your needs, ensuring a hassle-free experience from consultation to installation.

The Florida Living Outdoor Advantage

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Luxury Products

Each Awning is designed for Quality and we proudly install only premium grade product that function well in creating those outdoor spaces. MagnaTrack screens are designed to truly enhance your outdoor living experience and deliver trouble-free performance year after year and long-lasting beauty.

Local Florida outdoor living experts icon for veteran-owned motorized screen and pergola installation

Local Experts

As a family-veteran-owned, faith-based business, our team brings a personal touch to every project. We care. Our goal is to ensure your satisfaction and deliver unmatched service and outdoor luxury spaces.

26 years experience icon for FL Outdoor Class A contractor motorized screens and shade solutions

Extensive Experience

FL Outdoors possesses a track record of 26 years of serving major clients; our extensive experience speaks for itself. Trust our licensed Class A contractor services for excellence in installation and customer satisfaction.

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Superior Service

At Florida Living Outdoor, white-glove service is our hallmark. Your job is to dream and let us create a smile. We prioritize your needs, ensuring a hassle-free experience from consultation to installation.

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Florida Living Outdoors Solutions

Dual Specialties

Residential Solutions

Florida residential lanai with motorized retractable screens wood ceiling and outdoor living furniture

Your Florida home should be a sanctuary for relaxation, family time, and maybe even entertaining. Adding Motorized Screens to patios empowers you to curate any outdoor space to complement your aesthetics and meet your needs.

From Lanai Living to patio perfection, poolside cabanas to garages, and windows to doors, there are motorized screen options for every situation. Need motorized design ideas or a price check? Check out our motorized screen residential design guides and calculator.  

Commercial Solutions

Commercial restaurant patio with motorized screens providing weather protection for outdoor dining

Whether you're investing in your restaurant's patio seating or weatherproofing your outdoor event space, ensuring those areas remain usable and enjoyable for guests is critical to your bottom line and ultimate business success.

Does your restaurant’s patio contend with glaring sun? Or maybe the luxury outdoor kitchen area is being invaded by bugs? Maybe the upcoming hurricane season has you concerned. Whatever the challenge, Florida Living Outdoor, Fenetex, and MagnaTrack Motorized got you covered.

Your Vision Deserves

A Partner,

Not Just A Vendor

Florida Living Outdoors Solutions

Dual Specialties

Residential Solutions

Your Florida home should be a sanctuary for relaxation, family time, and maybe even entertaining. Adding Motorized Screens to patios empowers you to curate any outdoor space so it complements your aesthetics and meets your needs.

From Lanai Living to patio perfection, poolside cabanas to garages, and windows to doors, there are motorized screen options for every situation. Need motorized design ideas or a price check? Check out our motorized screen residential design guides and calculator.  

Commercial Solutions

Whether you're investing in your restaurant's patio seating or weather-proofing your outdoor event space, making sure those areas remain usable and enjoyable for guests is critical to the bottom line and your business' ultimate success.

Does your restaurant’s patio contend with glaring sun? Or maybe the luxury outdoor kitchen at your home is being invaded by bugs? Maybe the upcoming hurricane season has you concerned. Whatever the challenge, Fenetex Motorized

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A 600 px by 400 px blog photo depicting a conversation about motorized screen longevity. In a luxury Florida home overlooking a pool, a concerned homeowner gestures toward a salesperson while a speech bubble above her reads, "What do you mean I have to buy a whole new motorized screen?" The salesperson, wearing a professional polo, holds a brochure for "Southern Screen Solutions." To the left, a technical 3D cutaway of a motorized screen side track is overlaid, illustrating the complex internal components that often become obsolete. The image captures the frustration of encountering non-backward-compatible engineering at the ten-year service mark.

Motorized Screen Warranty: Why Backward Compatibility Decides Year 10

May 05, 202615 min read
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Backward Compatibility: Why OneTrack's Design Discipline Protects Your Warranty

A motorized screen warranty is only as good as the availability of replacement parts ten years later. That sentence is not a marketing line — it is the engineering reality behind every long-term ownership decision in this category. A lifetime warranty on a product means nothing if the manufacturer has discontinued the parts your specific unit was built with. And a lifetime warranty that is tied by contract to parts availability — backward-compatible parts availability — is worth paying attention to, because that language changes who carries the risk of a discontinued component at year ten.

A motorized screen warranty is only as good as the availability of replacement parts ten years later. Fenetex's OneTrack warranty writes this principle directly into contract language: the lifetime warranty on aluminum and proprietary components applies "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available" (Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023). That phrase is a design discipline commitment. New versions of the product must remain compatible with older units, or the warranty becomes the manufacturer's problem to honor. Here is what that commitment means for a homeowner planning to own the system for a decade or more.

What a Motorized Screen Warranty Actually Covers

Before the backward-compatibility argument makes sense, the warranty structure itself has to be understood. Motorized screen warranties are not one document. They are a stack of coverage categories, each with its own duration, prorate terms, and definition of what counts as a covered failure. A shopper who asks "what is the warranty" and accepts "lifetime" as an answer will be surprised in year six.

Here is the structure that every motorized screen warranty uses across all manufacturers in the premium Florida market.

Aluminum components — the housing, side tracks, and weight bar. This is the "lifetime" coverage most manufacturers advertise. Lifetime means different things to different manufacturers, and the difference is exactly where this post lives.

Proprietary engineered components — on a OneTrack system, this includes the spring-based articulating track mechanism; on a MagnaTrack system, this includes the magnetic track assembly. Both manufacturers provide coverage on these parts under terms that track the aluminum coverage.

Electronic controls — the motor, the receiver, the remote, and the wall switch if installed. These are the shortest-duration coverage items in every warranty. Fenetex covers electronic controls for five years. Progressive Screens covers electronic controls for two years. This gap is real, it is written into the contract, and it compounds across a fifteen-year ownership horizon in ways we cover in Post 8 on total cost of ownership [LINK PENDING — Post 8].

Fabric categories — clear vinyl, insect mesh, shade cloth, hurricane-rated fabric. Each category has its own duration. On OneTrack systems, clear vinyl is covered for three years against UV breakdown. On MagnaTrack systems, clear vinyl is covered for one year. Insect mesh and shade cloth coverage are comparable across both brands. Hurricane-rated fabric is covered for ten years across both brands.

Labor and service — typically the installer's responsibility, not the manufacturer's. This is why choosing your installer matters almost as much as choosing your manufacturer.

That is the structure. The backward-compatibility question falls under the aluminum and proprietary-components category, because that is where "lifetime" is promised, and where the parts-availability question determines whether lifetime means anything.

The Exact Fenetex Warranty Language

Fenetex's OneTrack warranty — Revision 03.08.2023 — includes a specific sentence that almost no shopper reads, and that almost no installer walks the homeowner through. It is short enough to quote in full:

"Lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available."

Read it slowly. There are two phrases doing real work in that sentence.

The first is "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production." Not "as long as the system is in production." The warranty extends to compatible systems. If Fenetex releases a new version of OneTrack in year eight of your ownership and that new version is engineered to be compatible with your older system, the warranty remains in effect. The manufacturer has written itself into a design discipline: future versions of the product must remain backward-compatible with older units, because the warranty contract requires it.

The second is "and parts are available." This is the inverse commitment. If parts are not available, the warranty cannot be honored. So the manufacturer's obligation is not just to produce compatible systems going forward — it is also to maintain parts availability on the systems already in the field. Both conditions must be met for the lifetime warranty to remain enforceable. And both conditions are written directly into the contract language.

This is not standard warranty language for motorized screens. Most manufacturers write "lifetime aluminum warranty" and stop there. What Fenetex has done — what makes this worth a dedicated post — is put the design discipline into the contract itself. The manufacturer cannot quietly obsolete your system without voiding its own warranty commitment. And that structural alignment between warranty and engineering is what "backward compatibility" actually means in practice.

Why Backward Compatibility Matters for the Homeowner

The reason this matters is that motorized screen failures at years five, seven, and ten are almost never total system failures. They are component-level failures. A motor burns out. A weight bar takes a debris hit. A snap-on cover cracks from UV exposure. An electronic controller sustains water damage due to a degraded housing seal. When those component failures happen — and in the normal course of ownership, at least one of them is going to happen — the question becomes: can you get the part?

For a homeowner who bought their motorized screen in 2015 from a manufacturer that has since released two generational redesigns, the answer is sometimes no. Not because the manufacturer is acting in bad faith, but because the original parts were engineered to different tolerances than the current ones, and the current production line does not stock the older geometries. At that point, the homeowner's options narrow quickly: pay for a full system upgrade to bring the installation to current spec, accept a non-OEM replacement part that may or may not match the system's service life, or walk away from the screen entirely.

A system engineered under a backward-compatibility discipline avoids most of that. The part shipped in 2015 is still being produced in 2026 because the current production line is designed to remain compatible with older units. The homeowner pays for the part and the labor to install it, and the system keeps running. The warranty, which was written to remain in effect only while compatible parts remain available, remains in effect. That is the entire point of the contract language.

Year five — usually a minor service event. The first worn weight bar gasket, a remote that needs reprogramming, and a housing screw that backed out under vibration. Backward-compatible parts make these jobs routine.

Year seven — often the first substantial service event. A motor that has accumulated duty cycles, a fabric edge that has started to fray, and a side track cover that has taken enough UV exposure to need replacement. If the parts are still manufactured, the service call is a few hundred dollars and an afternoon. If they are not, the conversation changes.

Year ten — the pivot point. This is where the ownership horizon gets decided. A system that cannot be serviced at year ten is one that the homeowner will replace. A system that can be serviced — because the manufacturer's design discipline kept the parts in production — will run into year fifteen and beyond.

The OneTrack Design Principle: One Concept, Many Iterations

Fenetex has built OneTrack as a single engineering concept — the spring-based articulating track — refined incrementally across product generations, all backward-compatible by design. The mechanical spring, the side track geometry, the weight bar attachment, and the housing architecture: these core elements carry forward across iterations. A OneTrack installed in 2018 and a OneTrack installed in 2026 share enough engineering DNA that the critical parts can be interchanged.

This is a design choice. It is not the only valid choice in the category, and Post 4 in this series covers the engineering case for design restraint versus generational redesign in more depth [LINK PENDING — Post 4]. But it is the choice Fenetex has made, and it is the choice the warranty language is built to enforce.

The practical consequence: a OneTrack buyer in 2026 is buying into a product family where the engineering discipline and the warranty contract are aligned. The design team cannot ship a breaking change without the warranty department catching it — because the warranty department's own contract language forbids it. That kind of internal check is unusual in consumer products. It is unusual enough to matter when comparing warranty structures.

What the MagnaTrack Warranty Says — And What It Does Not

Progressive Screens' MagnaTrack warranty covers aluminum components for a lifetime, with prorated coverage after 2 years. That means for the first two years of ownership, a defective aluminum part is replaced at no cost to the homeowner. After two years, the homeowner pays a prorated share of the replacement cost that increases each year until the coverage effectively phases out. This is a standard warranty structure in the category. It is defensible, it is widely used, and it is disclosed in the warranty document itself. Homeowners who receive the document at closeout will see the prorate schedule and can plan accordingly.

The MagnaTrack warranty does not include contract language addressing the forward compatibility of future product iterations. The warranty is written against the system as originally installed, not against a parts-compatibility commitment extending into future generations. This is not a criticism — it is simply the absence of a specific contract provision that Fenetex has chosen to include. Every shopper should read both warranties in full and draw their own conclusions about what those documents require of the manufacturer.

The difference we are pointing at in this post is structural, not qualitative. Both warranties are real warranties. Both are backed by real manufacturers. The difference is in whether the warranty contract also serves as an engineering discipline binding the manufacturer to parts-availability commitments across future product generations. Fenetex has built that bridge. Progressive Screens has built a more conventional warranty structure. Each buyer will weigh those differences against their own ownership horizon.

How to Read a Motorized Screen Warranty for Compatibility Language

If you are shopping for motorized screens right now, ask your installer for the complete warranty document before you sign. Not the one-page summary. The full document. Then read for four specific things.

First, look at the aluminum coverage duration and the prorate schedule. Is it lifetime non-prorated, or lifetime prorated after two years? The prorate clock starts at installation, so the three-year-old system that needs a housing replacement will cost different amounts under different warranties. Second, look at how "lifetime" is defined. Does the warranty explicitly condition lifetime coverage on parts availability and compatible-systems production, as Fenetex's language does? Or is lifetime defined against the original system only, with no forward-looking compatibility commitment? Third, check the electronic controls coverage duration. Fenetex: five years. Progressive Screens: two years. The difference is real, and it compounds. Fourth, check the fabric coverage by category. Clear vinyl durations vary most sharply between manufacturers; hurricane fabric coverage is more standardized.

Those four pieces of information are what a shopper needs to compare motorized screen warranties on substance rather than on the marketing copy.

Questions to Ask an Installer Before Signing

If I were a homeowner stepping into a dealership appointment tomorrow, these are the five questions I would ask before the contract came out. They are blunt by design. A good installer will welcome them.

  1. What is the aluminum warranty — lifetime non-prorated, or lifetime prorated after a set period?

  2. Is "lifetime" defined against this specific system only, or does the warranty language commit the manufacturer to compatible parts availability across future product generations?

  3. What is the electronic controls coverage in years?

  4. What is the clear vinyl coverage in years?

  5. If a part on this system fails in year ten, will I be able to source an OEM replacement from this manufacturer — and will you, as my installer, still be here to install it?

Question five is the one installers sometimes flinch at. It is also the one that matters most. A warranty is worthless if the manufacturer is willing, but the installer has closed. Florida Living Outdoor is a veteran-owned company that has been installing motorized screens across Central and South Florida since December 2021. Our answer to question five is documented: we service every system we install, and we service systems from other installers when we are asked to. That is the answer a homeowner wants to hear. Whether you hire us or someone else, make sure the installer can answer question five without flinching.

About the Author

Kip Hudakoz is the owner of Florida Living Outdoor LLC, a BBB A+ accredited, veteran-owned Florida outdoor services company specializing in motorized screens, retractable awnings, and pergola systems. Kip has spent twenty-six years in the Florida outdoor services industry, operating companies in Central Florida and South Florida. He is also the owner of Paramount Fencing and Custom Fence Orlando, and was a former co-host of "Ask the Experts" on News 96.5 Florida Home and Garden. Florida Living Outdoor was founded in December 2021 and earned its BBB A+ accreditation in October 2024. The company installs and services both MagnaTrack and OneTrack motorized screen systems across Central and South Florida.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a motorized screen warranty, and what does it cover?

A motorized screen warranty is a stack of coverage categories, not a single document. Aluminum components are typically covered for a lifetime with varying prorate structures. Proprietary engineered components — the magnetic or spring-based articulating track — carry coverage that usually tracks the aluminum coverage. Electronic controls (motor, receiver, remote) are the shortest-duration category, ranging from two to five years depending on the manufacturer. Fabric coverage varies by fabric type. Labor and service are almost always the installer's responsibility, not the manufacturer's.

What is backward compatibility in a motorized screen warranty?

Backward compatibility is an engineering discipline in which new product generations are designed to remain compatible with older units in the field. Fenetex's OneTrack warranty states this directly in the contract language: lifetime coverage applies "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available." This binds the manufacturer to maintain parts availability commitments across future product iterations, which keeps the lifetime warranty enforceable well into the ownership horizon.

How long is the OneTrack warranty?

OneTrack's aluminum and proprietary engineered components carry a lifetime warranty under Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023, conditioned on compatible-systems production and parts availability. Electronic controls are covered for five years. Clear vinyl is covered for three years. Hurricane fabric is covered for ten years.

How long is the MagnaTrack warranty?

MagnaTrack's aluminum components carry a lifetime warranty, prorated after two years. Electronic controls are covered for two years. Clear vinyl is covered for one year. Hurricane fabric is covered for ten years. The specific prorate schedule is disclosed in the Progressive Screens warranty document, which every buyer should request and review in full.

What happens if I need a motorized screen part in year ten?

This is the question backward-compatible design is meant to answer. On a system built under a compatibility discipline, the part you need in year ten is still being produced, because the current production line is engineered to remain compatible with older units. On a system without that discipline, the answer depends on whether the manufacturer has kept the specific generation of parts in production. Asking your installer this question before signing is the only way to get a defensible answer.

Can I repair an older motorized screen?

Usually, yes, if the parts are still available from the manufacturer and the installer is still in business. Most year-seven and year-ten service events are component-level — a motor, a weight bar, a housing seal, a controller — and are straightforward repairs when parts exist. The repair becomes uneconomic when parts have been discontinued, and non-OEM alternatives are not a reliable match.

What voids a motorized screen warranty?

Typical voids across both MagnaTrack and OneTrack warranties include non-professional installation, unauthorized modifications to the system, storm damage beyond the hurricane-rated product specification, and damage caused by deploying a daily-use (non-hurricane-rated) screen during a named-storm event. Manufacturer-specific voids are disclosed in each warranty document.

Ready to Talk About Warranty Language on Your Own Project?

To walk through the full warranty text on both systems — and get clear answers on the five questions in this post — contact Florida Living Outdoor for a free in-home consultation in Central or South Florida. We install and service both MagnaTrack and OneTrack systems, and we will show you the warranty documents side by side so you can review the language yourself.


Sources and Further Reading

  • Fenetex / OneTrack — manufacturer of OneTrack motorized screens. https://onetrackscreens.com

  • Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023 — source document for the "lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available" language quoted in this post.

  • Fenetex Design Guide v120253 — engineering specification document for OneTrack and MaxForce product families.

  • Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company) — manufacturer of MagnaTrack. https://progressivescreens.com

  • Progressive Screens MagnaTrack Warranty — publicly available warranty document covering the MagnaTrack product line.

  • US Patent 9,719,292 — MagnaTrack magnetic track system. https://patents.google.com/patent/US9719292

  • Florida Product Approval F30798 — MagnaTrack Defender hurricane screen. https://www.floridabuilding.org

  • Florida Product Approval FL8637 — Fenetex MaxForce hurricane screen. https://www.floridabuilding.org

  • Hunter Douglas acquisition of Progressive Screens (2020) — public corporate record. https://www.hunterdouglas.com

  • Florida Living Outdoor LLC — installer and service provider for both MagnaTrack and OneTrack systems in Central and South Florida. https://floridalivingoutdoor.com


motorized screen warrantymotorized screen parts compatibilityretractable screen warranty coverageOneTrack warrantycan I repair an older motorized screenmotorized screen replacement parts availabilitywhat voids a motorized screen warranty
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Khudakoz

Kip Hudakozs is the world renouned author that writes about the outdoor spaces.

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A 600 px by 400 px blog photo depicting a conversation about motorized screen longevity. In a luxury Florida home overlooking a pool, a concerned homeowner gestures toward a salesperson while a speech bubble above her reads, "What do you mean I have to buy a whole new motorized screen?" The salesperson, wearing a professional polo, holds a brochure for "Southern Screen Solutions." To the left, a technical 3D cutaway of a motorized screen side track is overlaid, illustrating the complex internal components that often become obsolete. The image captures the frustration of encountering non-backward-compatible engineering at the ten-year service mark.

Motorized Screen Warranty: Why Backward Compatibility Decides Year 10

May 05, 202615 min read
Custom HTML/CSS/JAVASCRIPT

Backward Compatibility: Why OneTrack's Design Discipline Protects Your Warranty

A motorized screen warranty is only as good as the availability of replacement parts ten years later. That sentence is not a marketing line — it is the engineering reality behind every long-term ownership decision in this category. A lifetime warranty on a product means nothing if the manufacturer has discontinued the parts your specific unit was built with. And a lifetime warranty that is tied by contract to parts availability — backward-compatible parts availability — is worth paying attention to, because that language changes who carries the risk of a discontinued component at year ten.

A motorized screen warranty is only as good as the availability of replacement parts ten years later. Fenetex's OneTrack warranty writes this principle directly into contract language: the lifetime warranty on aluminum and proprietary components applies "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available" (Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023). That phrase is a design discipline commitment. New versions of the product must remain compatible with older units, or the warranty becomes the manufacturer's problem to honor. Here is what that commitment means for a homeowner planning to own the system for a decade or more.

What a Motorized Screen Warranty Actually Covers

Before the backward-compatibility argument makes sense, the warranty structure itself has to be understood. Motorized screen warranties are not one document. They are a stack of coverage categories, each with its own duration, prorate terms, and definition of what counts as a covered failure. A shopper who asks "what is the warranty" and accepts "lifetime" as an answer will be surprised in year six.

Here is the structure that every motorized screen warranty uses across all manufacturers in the premium Florida market.

Aluminum components — the housing, side tracks, and weight bar. This is the "lifetime" coverage most manufacturers advertise. Lifetime means different things to different manufacturers, and the difference is exactly where this post lives.

Proprietary engineered components — on a OneTrack system, this includes the spring-based articulating track mechanism; on a MagnaTrack system, this includes the magnetic track assembly. Both manufacturers provide coverage on these parts under terms that track the aluminum coverage.

Electronic controls — the motor, the receiver, the remote, and the wall switch if installed. These are the shortest-duration coverage items in every warranty. Fenetex covers electronic controls for five years. Progressive Screens covers electronic controls for two years. This gap is real, it is written into the contract, and it compounds across a fifteen-year ownership horizon in ways we cover in Post 8 on total cost of ownership [LINK PENDING — Post 8].

Fabric categories — clear vinyl, insect mesh, shade cloth, hurricane-rated fabric. Each category has its own duration. On OneTrack systems, clear vinyl is covered for three years against UV breakdown. On MagnaTrack systems, clear vinyl is covered for one year. Insect mesh and shade cloth coverage are comparable across both brands. Hurricane-rated fabric is covered for ten years across both brands.

Labor and service — typically the installer's responsibility, not the manufacturer's. This is why choosing your installer matters almost as much as choosing your manufacturer.

That is the structure. The backward-compatibility question falls under the aluminum and proprietary-components category, because that is where "lifetime" is promised, and where the parts-availability question determines whether lifetime means anything.

The Exact Fenetex Warranty Language

Fenetex's OneTrack warranty — Revision 03.08.2023 — includes a specific sentence that almost no shopper reads, and that almost no installer walks the homeowner through. It is short enough to quote in full:

"Lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available."

Read it slowly. There are two phrases doing real work in that sentence.

The first is "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production." Not "as long as the system is in production." The warranty extends to compatible systems. If Fenetex releases a new version of OneTrack in year eight of your ownership and that new version is engineered to be compatible with your older system, the warranty remains in effect. The manufacturer has written itself into a design discipline: future versions of the product must remain backward-compatible with older units, because the warranty contract requires it.

The second is "and parts are available." This is the inverse commitment. If parts are not available, the warranty cannot be honored. So the manufacturer's obligation is not just to produce compatible systems going forward — it is also to maintain parts availability on the systems already in the field. Both conditions must be met for the lifetime warranty to remain enforceable. And both conditions are written directly into the contract language.

This is not standard warranty language for motorized screens. Most manufacturers write "lifetime aluminum warranty" and stop there. What Fenetex has done — what makes this worth a dedicated post — is put the design discipline into the contract itself. The manufacturer cannot quietly obsolete your system without voiding its own warranty commitment. And that structural alignment between warranty and engineering is what "backward compatibility" actually means in practice.

Why Backward Compatibility Matters for the Homeowner

The reason this matters is that motorized screen failures at years five, seven, and ten are almost never total system failures. They are component-level failures. A motor burns out. A weight bar takes a debris hit. A snap-on cover cracks from UV exposure. An electronic controller sustains water damage due to a degraded housing seal. When those component failures happen — and in the normal course of ownership, at least one of them is going to happen — the question becomes: can you get the part?

For a homeowner who bought their motorized screen in 2015 from a manufacturer that has since released two generational redesigns, the answer is sometimes no. Not because the manufacturer is acting in bad faith, but because the original parts were engineered to different tolerances than the current ones, and the current production line does not stock the older geometries. At that point, the homeowner's options narrow quickly: pay for a full system upgrade to bring the installation to current spec, accept a non-OEM replacement part that may or may not match the system's service life, or walk away from the screen entirely.

A system engineered under a backward-compatibility discipline avoids most of that. The part shipped in 2015 is still being produced in 2026 because the current production line is designed to remain compatible with older units. The homeowner pays for the part and the labor to install it, and the system keeps running. The warranty, which was written to remain in effect only while compatible parts remain available, remains in effect. That is the entire point of the contract language.

Year five — usually a minor service event. The first worn weight bar gasket, a remote that needs reprogramming, and a housing screw that backed out under vibration. Backward-compatible parts make these jobs routine.

Year seven — often the first substantial service event. A motor that has accumulated duty cycles, a fabric edge that has started to fray, and a side track cover that has taken enough UV exposure to need replacement. If the parts are still manufactured, the service call is a few hundred dollars and an afternoon. If they are not, the conversation changes.

Year ten — the pivot point. This is where the ownership horizon gets decided. A system that cannot be serviced at year ten is one that the homeowner will replace. A system that can be serviced — because the manufacturer's design discipline kept the parts in production — will run into year fifteen and beyond.

The OneTrack Design Principle: One Concept, Many Iterations

Fenetex has built OneTrack as a single engineering concept — the spring-based articulating track — refined incrementally across product generations, all backward-compatible by design. The mechanical spring, the side track geometry, the weight bar attachment, and the housing architecture: these core elements carry forward across iterations. A OneTrack installed in 2018 and a OneTrack installed in 2026 share enough engineering DNA that the critical parts can be interchanged.

This is a design choice. It is not the only valid choice in the category, and Post 4 in this series covers the engineering case for design restraint versus generational redesign in more depth [LINK PENDING — Post 4]. But it is the choice Fenetex has made, and it is the choice the warranty language is built to enforce.

The practical consequence: a OneTrack buyer in 2026 is buying into a product family where the engineering discipline and the warranty contract are aligned. The design team cannot ship a breaking change without the warranty department catching it — because the warranty department's own contract language forbids it. That kind of internal check is unusual in consumer products. It is unusual enough to matter when comparing warranty structures.

What the MagnaTrack Warranty Says — And What It Does Not

Progressive Screens' MagnaTrack warranty covers aluminum components for a lifetime, with prorated coverage after 2 years. That means for the first two years of ownership, a defective aluminum part is replaced at no cost to the homeowner. After two years, the homeowner pays a prorated share of the replacement cost that increases each year until the coverage effectively phases out. This is a standard warranty structure in the category. It is defensible, it is widely used, and it is disclosed in the warranty document itself. Homeowners who receive the document at closeout will see the prorate schedule and can plan accordingly.

The MagnaTrack warranty does not include contract language addressing the forward compatibility of future product iterations. The warranty is written against the system as originally installed, not against a parts-compatibility commitment extending into future generations. This is not a criticism — it is simply the absence of a specific contract provision that Fenetex has chosen to include. Every shopper should read both warranties in full and draw their own conclusions about what those documents require of the manufacturer.

The difference we are pointing at in this post is structural, not qualitative. Both warranties are real warranties. Both are backed by real manufacturers. The difference is in whether the warranty contract also serves as an engineering discipline binding the manufacturer to parts-availability commitments across future product generations. Fenetex has built that bridge. Progressive Screens has built a more conventional warranty structure. Each buyer will weigh those differences against their own ownership horizon.

How to Read a Motorized Screen Warranty for Compatibility Language

If you are shopping for motorized screens right now, ask your installer for the complete warranty document before you sign. Not the one-page summary. The full document. Then read for four specific things.

First, look at the aluminum coverage duration and the prorate schedule. Is it lifetime non-prorated, or lifetime prorated after two years? The prorate clock starts at installation, so the three-year-old system that needs a housing replacement will cost different amounts under different warranties. Second, look at how "lifetime" is defined. Does the warranty explicitly condition lifetime coverage on parts availability and compatible-systems production, as Fenetex's language does? Or is lifetime defined against the original system only, with no forward-looking compatibility commitment? Third, check the electronic controls coverage duration. Fenetex: five years. Progressive Screens: two years. The difference is real, and it compounds. Fourth, check the fabric coverage by category. Clear vinyl durations vary most sharply between manufacturers; hurricane fabric coverage is more standardized.

Those four pieces of information are what a shopper needs to compare motorized screen warranties on substance rather than on the marketing copy.

Questions to Ask an Installer Before Signing

If I were a homeowner stepping into a dealership appointment tomorrow, these are the five questions I would ask before the contract came out. They are blunt by design. A good installer will welcome them.

  1. What is the aluminum warranty — lifetime non-prorated, or lifetime prorated after a set period?

  2. Is "lifetime" defined against this specific system only, or does the warranty language commit the manufacturer to compatible parts availability across future product generations?

  3. What is the electronic controls coverage in years?

  4. What is the clear vinyl coverage in years?

  5. If a part on this system fails in year ten, will I be able to source an OEM replacement from this manufacturer — and will you, as my installer, still be here to install it?

Question five is the one installers sometimes flinch at. It is also the one that matters most. A warranty is worthless if the manufacturer is willing, but the installer has closed. Florida Living Outdoor is a veteran-owned company that has been installing motorized screens across Central and South Florida since December 2021. Our answer to question five is documented: we service every system we install, and we service systems from other installers when we are asked to. That is the answer a homeowner wants to hear. Whether you hire us or someone else, make sure the installer can answer question five without flinching.

About the Author

Kip Hudakoz is the owner of Florida Living Outdoor LLC, a BBB A+ accredited, veteran-owned Florida outdoor services company specializing in motorized screens, retractable awnings, and pergola systems. Kip has spent twenty-six years in the Florida outdoor services industry, operating companies in Central Florida and South Florida. He is also the owner of Paramount Fencing and Custom Fence Orlando, and was a former co-host of "Ask the Experts" on News 96.5 Florida Home and Garden. Florida Living Outdoor was founded in December 2021 and earned its BBB A+ accreditation in October 2024. The company installs and services both MagnaTrack and OneTrack motorized screen systems across Central and South Florida.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a motorized screen warranty, and what does it cover?

A motorized screen warranty is a stack of coverage categories, not a single document. Aluminum components are typically covered for a lifetime with varying prorate structures. Proprietary engineered components — the magnetic or spring-based articulating track — carry coverage that usually tracks the aluminum coverage. Electronic controls (motor, receiver, remote) are the shortest-duration category, ranging from two to five years depending on the manufacturer. Fabric coverage varies by fabric type. Labor and service are almost always the installer's responsibility, not the manufacturer's.

What is backward compatibility in a motorized screen warranty?

Backward compatibility is an engineering discipline in which new product generations are designed to remain compatible with older units in the field. Fenetex's OneTrack warranty states this directly in the contract language: lifetime coverage applies "as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available." This binds the manufacturer to maintain parts availability commitments across future product iterations, which keeps the lifetime warranty enforceable well into the ownership horizon.

How long is the OneTrack warranty?

OneTrack's aluminum and proprietary engineered components carry a lifetime warranty under Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023, conditioned on compatible-systems production and parts availability. Electronic controls are covered for five years. Clear vinyl is covered for three years. Hurricane fabric is covered for ten years.

How long is the MagnaTrack warranty?

MagnaTrack's aluminum components carry a lifetime warranty, prorated after two years. Electronic controls are covered for two years. Clear vinyl is covered for one year. Hurricane fabric is covered for ten years. The specific prorate schedule is disclosed in the Progressive Screens warranty document, which every buyer should request and review in full.

What happens if I need a motorized screen part in year ten?

This is the question backward-compatible design is meant to answer. On a system built under a compatibility discipline, the part you need in year ten is still being produced, because the current production line is engineered to remain compatible with older units. On a system without that discipline, the answer depends on whether the manufacturer has kept the specific generation of parts in production. Asking your installer this question before signing is the only way to get a defensible answer.

Can I repair an older motorized screen?

Usually, yes, if the parts are still available from the manufacturer and the installer is still in business. Most year-seven and year-ten service events are component-level — a motor, a weight bar, a housing seal, a controller — and are straightforward repairs when parts exist. The repair becomes uneconomic when parts have been discontinued, and non-OEM alternatives are not a reliable match.

What voids a motorized screen warranty?

Typical voids across both MagnaTrack and OneTrack warranties include non-professional installation, unauthorized modifications to the system, storm damage beyond the hurricane-rated product specification, and damage caused by deploying a daily-use (non-hurricane-rated) screen during a named-storm event. Manufacturer-specific voids are disclosed in each warranty document.

Ready to Talk About Warranty Language on Your Own Project?

To walk through the full warranty text on both systems — and get clear answers on the five questions in this post — contact Florida Living Outdoor for a free in-home consultation in Central or South Florida. We install and service both MagnaTrack and OneTrack systems, and we will show you the warranty documents side by side so you can review the language yourself.


Sources and Further Reading

  • Fenetex / OneTrack — manufacturer of OneTrack motorized screens. https://onetrackscreens.com

  • Fenetex Warranty Rev 03.08.2023 — source document for the "lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available" language quoted in this post.

  • Fenetex Design Guide v120253 — engineering specification document for OneTrack and MaxForce product families.

  • Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company) — manufacturer of MagnaTrack. https://progressivescreens.com

  • Progressive Screens MagnaTrack Warranty — publicly available warranty document covering the MagnaTrack product line.

  • US Patent 9,719,292 — MagnaTrack magnetic track system. https://patents.google.com/patent/US9719292

  • Florida Product Approval F30798 — MagnaTrack Defender hurricane screen. https://www.floridabuilding.org

  • Florida Product Approval FL8637 — Fenetex MaxForce hurricane screen. https://www.floridabuilding.org

  • Hunter Douglas acquisition of Progressive Screens (2020) — public corporate record. https://www.hunterdouglas.com

  • Florida Living Outdoor LLC — installer and service provider for both MagnaTrack and OneTrack systems in Central and South Florida. https://floridalivingoutdoor.com


motorized screen warrantymotorized screen parts compatibilityretractable screen warranty coverageOneTrack warrantycan I repair an older motorized screenmotorized screen replacement parts availabilitywhat voids a motorized screen warranty
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Khudakoz

Kip Hudakozs is the world renouned author that writes about the outdoor spaces.

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