
MaxForce Hurricane Screens are the result of years of real-world testing, research, and engineering refinement. Built to withstand the harshest conditions without sacrificing aesthetics, they offer maximum protection for your patio or lanai with hurricane-rated performance.
Tested, Trusted, Proven, and Never compromised—these screens are built for the long haul:

MaxForce Hurricane Screens are the result of years of real-world testing, research, and engineering refinement. Built to withstand the harshest conditions without sacrificing aesthetics, they offer maximum protection for your patio or lanai with hurricane-rated performance.
Tested, Trusted, Proven, and Never compromised—these screens are built for the long haul:

A Partner
A Partner
The MaxForce Hurricane Screen System meet or exceeds Miami-Dade and Florida Building Code requirements—the toughest hurricane codes on earth—for roll-down hurricane screens. Rated for the 185 MPH wind zone, and with real-world and certified testing. With spans of up to 24 feet, they exceed performance criteria for all local and International Building Codes.

The MaxForce Hurricane Screen System meet or exceeds Miami-Dade and Florida Building Code requirements—the toughest hurricane codes on earth—for roll-down hurricane screens. Rated for the 185 MPH wind zone, and with real-world and certified testing. With spans of up to 24 feet, they exceed performance criteria for all local and International Building Codes.

MaxForce Fix Hurricane Track holds firm under extreme loads

Powder Coated Aluminum Protects your investment from exposure and corrosion.

Our screens are designed to withstand the extreme. High wind, Rain, or Shine, Dust Dirt, Dander, it does not matter. MaxForce covers it all


MaxForce Fix Hurricane Track holds firm under extreme loads

Powder Coated Aluminum Protects your investment from exposure and corrosion.

Our screens are designed to withstand the extreme. High wind, Rain, or Shine, Dust Dirt, Dander, it does not matter. MaxForce covers it all
MaxForce Hurricane Screens, powered by our patented MaxForce system, meet the toughest standards—including HVHZ certification in Miami-Dade and Broward. They last longer, resist more, and do more than any screen on the market—proven protection without compromise.
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MaxForce Hurricane Screens —Delivers 365 days of perfect protection, rain or shine, on your patio and lanai. With the push of a button or a tap on the mobile app, your patio is storm-ready— furniture and openings fully protected in seconds.
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MaxForce Hurricane Screens fabric blocks up to 95% of the sun’s damaging UV-rays while shielding against wind, rain, insects, dust, and debris. It also helps reduce heat and lower energy costs by limiting solar exposure—comfort and protection in one smart solution.
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Like all Fenetex products, our MaxForce Hurricane Screens are highly customizable and built to order—made to fit your exact openings. No guesswork, no compromises—just precision-fit protection tailored to your space.
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Pair our retractable MaxForce Hurricane Screens with other Fenetex screens for customized and independent solutions. Each screen operates independently, giving you the protection you want when you need it.
MaxForce Hurricane Screens offer built-in privacy without blocking your view. Like a two-way mirror, you can see out—but neighbors and passersby cannot see in. It provides the perfect blend of openness and seclusion, day or night.
MaxForce Hurricane Screens, powered by our patented MaxForce system, meet the toughest standards—including HVHZ certification in Miami-Dade and Broward. They last longer, resist more, and do more than any screen on the market—proven protection without compromise.
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MaxForce Hurricane Screens —Delivers 365 days of perfect protection, rain or shine, on your patio and lanai. With the push of a button or a tap on the mobile app, your patio is storm-ready— furniture and openings fully protected in seconds.
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MaxForce Hurricane Screens fabric blocks up to 95% of the sun’s damaging UV-rays while shielding against wind, rain, insects, dust, and debris. It also helps reduce heat and lower energy costs by limiting solar exposure—comfort and protection in one smart solution.
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Like all Fenetex products, our MaxForce Hurricane Screens are highly customizable and built to order—made to fit your exact openings. No guesswork, no compromises—just precision-fit protection tailored to your space.
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Pair our retractable MaxForce Hurricane Screens with other Fenetex screens for customized and independent solutions. Each screen operates independently, giving you the protection you want when you need it.
MaxForce Hurricane Screens offer built-in privacy without blocking your view. Like a two-way mirror, you can see out—but neighbors and passersby cannot see in. It provides the perfect blend of openness and seclusion, day or night.










Backed by Twitchell’s OmegaTex fabric, our hurricane screens are engineered with ballistic-grade and enhanced fibers for maximum strength and durability. These fabrics aren’t just tough—they’re also UV-protected for long-lasting performance and crafted with aesthetics in mind. Choose from six elegant colors designed to complement the architecture of your home.


Choosing the right screen color is simple with . Our standard color selections are designed to blend seamlessly with your architecture and framework, offering a clean, cohesive look. For unique designs, custom powder coating is available to match any project. All finishes are marine-grade and infused with UV ray inhibitors—built to endure the elements and maintain their beauty for years to come.
Selecting your preferred control method is effortless with MaxForce Hurricane Screens. Whether you choose handheld remotes, mobile apps, or smart home integration, our systems are designed to fit your lifestyle. No need to settle—just integrate and enjoy continuous, seamless operation 24/7. It's control on your terms, exactly when and where you need it.

Backed by Twitchell’s OmegaTex fabric, our hurricane screens are engineered with ballistic-grade and enhanced fibers for maximum strength and durability. These fabrics aren’t just tough—they’re also UV-protected for long-lasting performance and crafted with aesthetics in mind. Choose from six elegant colors designed to complement the architecture of your home.

Choosing the right screen color is simple with . Our standard color selections are designed to blend seamlessly with your architecture and framework, offering a clean, cohesive look. For unique designs, custom powder coating is available to match any project. All finishes are marine-grade and infused with UV ray inhibitors—built to endure the elements and maintain their beauty for years to come.
Selecting your preferred control method is effortless with MaxForce Hurricane Screens. Whether you choose handheld remotes, mobile apps, or smart home integration, our systems are designed to fit your lifestyle. No need to settle—just integrate and enjoy continuous, seamless operation 24/7. It's control on your terms, exactly when and where you need it.

With the Bond Bridge Pro, managing your MaxForce Hurricane Screens is seamless and smart. This powerful integration allows you to open or close your screens from anywhere using your smartphone, voice assistant, or home automation system. Whether you're at home, at work, or away on vacation, control is always at your fingertips.



















With the Bond Bridge Pro, managing your MaxForce Hurricane Screens is seamless and smart. This powerful integration allows you to open or close your screens from anywhere using your smartphone, voice assistant, or home automation system. Whether you're at home, at work, or away on vacation, control is always at your fingertips.



















For nearly two decades MaxForce Hurricane Screens has manufactured hurricane screens to meet the most demanding building code, the High Velocity Hurricane Zone of Miami-Dade. The MaxForce track is our newest version of the fixed track we have used with great success for high wind applications all over the globe.
The benefits of a fixed track are unmatched strength - this is important when designing a screen system for hurricanes. When you want the strongest system available, and a proven veteran of many hurricanes, the MaxForce Hurricane Track is your best choice.

For nearly two decades MaxForce Hurricane Screens has manufactured hurricane screens to meet the most demanding building code, the High Velocity Hurricane Zone of Miami-Dade. The MaxForce track is our newest version of the fixed track we have used with great success for high wind applications all over the globe.
The benefits of a fixed track are unmatched strength - this is important when designing a screen system for hurricanes. When you want the strongest system available, and a proven veteran of many hurricanes, the MaxForce Hurricane Track is your best choice.

MaxForce is the only retractable screen system on the market designed to stay locked in the track—even in high winds. Smart motor senses resistance and adjusts seamlessly, allowing self-correction when the screen encounters an obstacle: Fewer snags, fewer jams, and fewer costly service calls.

MaxForce Hurricane Screens pioneered Keder-edge technology in motorized screens, delivering unmatched durability and simplicity. Borrowed from sailboat rigging, this system eliminates zippers, cables, and exposed hardware—ensuring smooth, reliable operation every time.

The MaxForce weight bar is engineered for strength—and built to hold its ground. Pound for pound, it’s the heaviest and most robust weight bar in the industry. This ensures proper screen tension, flawless deployment, and maximum stability in high wind zones. —limited flex, no failure.

MaxForce’s heavy-duty weight bar isn’t just strong. It’s smart. Reinforced corners and integrated tie-ins create a unified structure that acts like a solid wall of protection when deployed. Made from high-strength nylon, this bar absorbs impacts while maintaining structural integrity.

MaxForce is the only retractable screen system on the market designed to stay locked in the track—even in high winds. Smart motor senses resistance and adjusts seamlessly, allowing self-correction when the screen encounters an obstacle: Fewer snags, fewer jams, and fewer costly service calls.

MaxForce Hurricane Screens pioneered Keder-edge technology in motorized screens, delivering unmatched durability and simplicity. Borrowed from sailboat rigging, this system eliminates zippers, cables, and exposed hardware—ensuring smooth, reliable operation every time.

The MaxForce weight bar is engineered for strength—and built to hold its ground. Pound for pound, it’s the heaviest and most robust weight bar in the industry. This ensures proper screen tension, flawless deployment, and maximum stability in high wind zones. —limited flex, no failure.

MaxForce’s heavy-duty weight bar isn’t just strong. It’s smart. Reinforced corners and integrated tie-ins create a unified structure that acts like a solid wall of protection when deployed. Made from high-strength nylon, this bar absorbs impacts while maintaining structural integrity.
Proudly Made in the USA—every MaxForce Hurricane Screen is built with American strength, precision, and pride. From the smallest components to the final assembly, our materials are sourced and manufactured right here in the United States. No outsourcing. No compromises. Just hardworking Americans protecting American homes with the toughest screen system on the market.


Proudly Made in the USA—every MaxForce Hurricane Screen is built with American strength, precision, and pride. From the smallest components to the final assembly, our materials are sourced and manufactured right here in the United States. No outsourcing. No compromises. Just hardworking Americans protecting American homes with the toughest screen system on the market.
At FL OUTDOOR, quality isn’t a buzzword—it’s a promise. Every MaxForce Hurricane Screens system we install is a product of precision engineering and world-class American manufacturing, built to perform under pressure and look flawless doing it.
We are highly trained professionals who treat your home like their own. From laser-accurate measurements to clean, detail-focused installations, we don’t cut corners—we define them.


At FL OUTDOOR, quality isn’t a buzzword—it’s a promise. Every MaxForce Hurricane Screens system we install is a product of precision engineering and world-class American manufacturing, built to perform under pressure and look flawless doing it.
We are highly trained professionals who treat your home like their own. From laser-accurate measurements to clean, detail-focused installations, we don’t cut corners—we define them.

For years, motorized screen service calls were a regular event. A bound track in year four. A strained motor at year six. A frayed fabric edge at year seven. A controller was water-damaged in year eight. Any homeowner who bought a motorized screen before 2015 has some version of this story, and so does any installer who was working the category back then. Then the free-floating articulating track category arrived, the category redesigned itself around magnetic pull and mechanical spring push, and the service-call economics changed almost overnight. Today, both leading engineered products in the premium segment eliminate roughly 99% of the service calls that used to be routine. This is not marketing. It is dealer experience across multiple years of field installations. The question is what lives in the last one percent — and why that rare one percent, more than the shared ninety-nine percent, decides how your ownership plays out across a fifteen-year horizon.
Roughly ninety-nine percent of motorized screen service calls disappear when a product uses three engineering principles: obstacle-detection motors, free-floating articulating tracks, and self-refeeding track alignment. Both OneTrack and MagnaTrack share these principles, and both products perform as promised in the field, which is why each publishes service-call elimination figures above 98%. The real question for a buyer is not which system eliminates more service calls. It is what happens in the rare one percent when a service call does occur, or when a replacement part is needed five, seven, or ten years into ownership. Here is what the math actually looks like.
Before the discussion about the last one percent makes sense, the shared ninety-nine percent has to be credited properly. Both OneTrack and MagnaTrack engineer around the same three principles, and it is the combination of all three — not any single one — that shuts down the service-call volume that once defined the category.
The motor in a premium motorized screen is not a simple electric motor running on a timer. It is a smart motor that monitors the resistance it encounters during operation and halts the screen the moment something unexpected gets in the way. A cat on the track. A chair edge that the homeowner forgot about. A dog toy lodged in the channel. A branch that blew in overnight. Under the old rigid-track architecture, the motor would fight through these obstacles and either burn out or tear the fabric. Under modern obstacle-detection architecture, the motor stops, briefly reverses, and waits for the homeowner to clear the obstruction before completing the cycle. This one feature eliminates a measurable share of the service calls that used to come from fabric tears and motor burnout.
Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack use obstacle-detection motors sourced from the same small group of premium motor manufacturers that supply the European and American motorized-screen markets. The motor technology is not proprietary to either brand. It is a shared category standard that both manufacturers have folded into their current production.
The engineering category we covered in Post 1 and broke down in detail in Post 2 [LINK PENDING — Post 2]. The inner track flexes and reseats itself under wind or debris loads rather than resisting the force. MagnaTrack does this with neodymium magnets that pull the inner track back into alignment. OneTrack does this with precision compression springs pushing the inner track back. Both approaches produce the same functional outcome: the screen stops tearing at the edge, the motor stops straining against resistance that should not be there, and the service call that used to come at year four or five simply does not get made.
This is the third principle and the one most homeowners have never heard of. When a screen is partly dislodged from its track — by wind, by a careless deployment, by a branch strike — both modern systems are engineered to self-correct as the screen rolls back up onto the roll tube. The screen does not wrap unevenly. It does not bunch. It does not require the installer to climb up and re-thread anything. The next time the homeowner operates the screen, the system realigns itself within the first full cycle. This eliminates a significant share of what was once called "the annual maintenance call" in the motorized-screen service economy.
Three engineering principles. Both products use all three. The ninety-nine percent service-call elimination figure is defensible for both, and for the same reason on both sides.
Progressive Screens reports approximately 98% service-call elimination for MagnaTrack. Fenetex publishes approximately ninety-nine percent for OneTrack. Both figures are real. Both are defensible. The one-percent delta falls within the statistical noise of real-world installation variability — a rounding error in how each manufacturer collects field data, not a meaningful performance differential.
I own and operate Florida Living Outdoor. We install both MagnaTrack and OneTrack across Central and South Florida, across multiple years and hundreds of installations. I will tell you directly what the field record shows. Both products perform. Service calls on both are rare. Rare enough that when a call does come in, it is usually not about the track mechanism at all — it is a power-line interruption resetting a controller, or a remote pairing that drifted in an electrical storm, or a storm debris strike that bent a weight bar, or a house cat that wedged a toy into a track channel. The self-correcting tracks, on both products, do what the engineering claims. The obstacle-detection motors work. The self-refeeding alignment works.
When you install both brands over time, you stop thinking of service-call rate as a brand-level question. You start thinking of it as a category question that both brands have answered. Which is why the real question for a buyer is not which system eliminates more service calls. The right question is what happens in the rare one percent of cases when a service call occurs, or when a replacement part is needed five, seven, or ten years into ownership. That question has a different answer for each brand, and the difference is where the fifteen-year ownership experience actually lives.
Set aside the shared ninety-nine percent and look closely at the one percent. What kinds of service events land there?
Four categories cover most of the remaining volume. The first is motor end-of-life — every motor has a duty cycle, and a motor installed in year zero will need replacement somewhere between year eight and year fifteen, depending on how heavily the screen is used. The second is physical damage from external events — a palm frond strike, a construction-site impact during a kitchen remodel ten years after the screen was installed, or an unusual storm. The third is clear vinyl fabric UV breakdown — the fabric itself has a service life shorter than the aluminum structure, and clear vinyl in particular needs replacement at some point during the ownership window. The fourth is electronic controller failure — the motor itself lasts a long time, but the receiver, the remote, and occasionally the wall switch take the abuse that Florida homes are known for.
None of these four categories is a failure of the free-floating articulating track engineering. They are what normal durable-goods ownership looks like on any premium outdoor product over a ten-to-fifteen-year window. The shared ninety-nine percent has eliminated the track-mechanism failures that once defined the category. What is left is the ordinary wear of components that have their own service lives independent of the track design.
And this is where the two product families diverge. Because when a motor has to be replaced, a weight bar has to be replaced, a fabric panel has to be re-ordered, or a controller has to be swapped, the question is: can you get the specific part your system was built with, ten years after you bought it?
Parts availability is the ownership variable that most motorized screen shoppers never think to ask about, and it is the one that determines whether the lifetime warranty on the aluminum means anything. If the part you need in year ten is still being manufactured, the repair is a few hundred dollars and an afternoon. If the part has been discontinued, the repair becomes either a full system upgrade or a non-OEM substitution that may or may not be compatible with the rest of your installation.
This is where the engineering discipline of the manufacturer's design philosophy — the subject of Post 4 [LINK PENDING — Post 4] — becomes the difference between a three-hundred-dollar repair and a three-thousand-dollar system upgrade. And it is where the warranty contract language from Post 3 [LINK PENDING — Post 3] earns its seat at the table in this post.
Fenetex's OneTrack warranty (Revision 03.08.2023) includes the specific sentence we covered in Post 3, and it applies directly to the parts-availability question:
"Lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available."
This is the backward-compatibility commitment written directly into the warranty contract. The manufacturer cannot quietly obsolete your system without voiding its own warranty. New product iterations must remain compatible with older units. Parts must be kept in production. Both conditions must be met for the lifetime warranty to remain enforceable, and both are enforced by the contract language itself.
For a homeowner whose motorized screen was installed in 2018 and needs a replacement weight bar in 2028, the Fenetex language means the answer at the dealer's parts desk is simple. The weight bar that shipped in 2018 is still being produced in 2028, because the current production line is engineered to stay compatible with older units. The manufacturer's warranty requires it.
MagnaTrack's product family has followed a different path. The current production specification is documented in the Progressive Screens 2023 Generation 4 CAD dated 08.16.23 — the engineering reference every Progressive Screens dealer uses to specify current-production MagnaTrack installations. This is a Generation 4 product. There have been earlier generations of MagnaTrack, and the history of those generations matters for anyone whose MagnaTrack installation is more than a few years old.
From the dealer service desk: parts for Generation 1 and Generation 2 MagnaTrack units are no longer manufactured. Installations from those earlier generations, if they need component-level service today, cannot source original OEM parts from Progressive Screens' current production line. Generation 3 MagnaTrack units are in a more complicated position — certain components can be replaced with current production parts, but the track, weight bar, and screen often need to be upgraded together to remain serviceable, because the dimensional tolerances shifted between generations.
None of this is a criticism of Progressive Screens. Every manufacturer in a still-maturing category makes its own decisions about how to evolve the product across generations, and Progressive Screens has made its choices for engineering and business reasons. What it means for a homeowner is that the age of the specific MagnaTrack installation, not just the brand name, determines which service options will be available at year ten.
For an owner of a current-generation MagnaTrack installed in 2024 or later, parts availability at year ten will be determined by Progressive Screens' decisions over the next decade regarding Generation 5 or future redesigns. For an owner of an older generation, the parts-availability question is already being answered by the current production catalog.
The Fenetex warranty language structurally ties the manufacturer's hands. The MagnaTrack warranty does not contain equivalent language, and the manufacturer retains the engineering freedom to continue its generational-redesign approach. Both approaches are legitimate. Both have trade-offs. The trade-off a homeowner should weigh is how that choice plays out over a 15-year ownership period.
This is where the specific warranty terms compound. Some of this we covered in Post 3 [LINK PENDING — Post 3] and some we will carry into Post 8 on total cost of ownership [LINK PENDING — Post 8]. Here is the summary at the warranty-coverage level.
Aluminum coverage: OneTrack is lifetime, non-prorated, and tied to parts availability commitment. MagnaTrack is lifetime prorated after two years — the homeowner's prorated share of any aluminum replacement cost increases each year after year two.
Electronic controls coverage: OneTrack is five years. MagnaTrack is two years. Controller failures at year three, four, or five are the homeowner's cost on MagnaTrack and the manufacturer's cost on OneTrack.
Clear vinyl fabric coverage: OneTrack is three years. MagnaTrack is one year. Clear vinyl is one of the most common fabric-replacement events across the ownership window, and the gap between one year and three years compounds meaningfully.
Hurricane fabric coverage: Both brands cover hurricane fabric for ten years. This is a genuine parity point — the most expensive fabric category gets identical coverage from both manufacturers.
Across a fifteen-year ownership horizon, these coverage differences compound into real out-of-pocket dollars at specific years — year three (controller), year four (clear vinyl), year seven (controller replacement cycle), year ten (aluminum service events, where the prorate clock has been running for eight years on the MagnaTrack warranty). The full TCO math lives in Post 8 [LINK PENDING — Post 8]. The framework for reading those numbers starts here.
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.
Premium motorized screens with free-floating articulating tracks, obstacle-detection motors, and self-refeeding alignment — the three shared engineering principles behind both OneTrack and MagnaTrack — eliminate approximately ninety-nine percent of the service calls that used to be routine on older rigid-track and zipper systems. In practice, service calls on modern premium systems are rare events, usually tied to electrical system disruptions, physical damage from external events, or normal end-of-life component replacement after a decade or more of use.
Both OneTrack and MagnaTrack publish service-call elimination figures above ninety-eight percent. Fenetex publishes approximately ninety-nine percent for OneTrack. Progressive Screens publishes approximately ninety-eight percent for MagnaTrack. Both figures are defensible and both rest on the same underlying engineering — obstacle-detection motors, free-floating articulating tracks, and self-refeeding track alignment. The one-percent difference between the two figures is statistical noise inside the real-world installation variability band.
Four categories account for most rare service events. Aged motor end-of-life, typically between years eight and fifteen. Physical damage from outside events — debris strikes, construction-site impacts, unusual storm events. Clear vinyl fabric UV breakdown, which has a shorter service life than the aluminum structure. And electronic controller failure, where receivers and remotes are subject to electrical-system abuse.
The answer depends on the manufacturer's design philosophy and warranty contract language. Fenetex's OneTrack warranty ties the lifetime aluminum coverage to parts-availability and backward-compatibility commitments written directly into the contract — the specific phrase is "lifetime means as long as the system or compatible systems are in production and parts are available." Progressive Screens' MagnaTrack warranty is a more conventional structure without equivalent forward-compatibility language; parts availability depends on which product generation was installed and whether that generation is still in production.
A well-specified premium motorized screen on a free-floating, articulating-track architecture should last 15 years or more under normal residential use. Both OneTrack and MagnaTrack deliver that service life in the field. The older zipper-track and rigid-track systems that preceded the current category commonly failed in years four through six, which is why the category redesigned itself around articulating tracks.
The major differences are in coverage duration and prorate structure. Aluminum coverage: OneTrack is lifetime, non-prorated, and tied to parts availability; MagnaTrack is lifetime, prorated after two years. Electronic controls: OneTrack five years, MagnaTrack two years. Clear vinyl: OneTrack three years, MagnaTrack one year. Hurricane fabric: both ten years. Labor is the installer's responsibility on both. The full warranty text is available from both manufacturers, and every buyer should read both documents in full.
Progressive Screens' current production specification is Generation 4, documented in the 2023 Gen 4 CAD. Parts for Generation 1 and Generation 2 installations are no longer manufactured, meaning component-level service on those older installations cannot source original OEM parts from the current production line. Generation 3 installations often require track, weight bar, and screen components to be upgraded together to remain serviceable. Homeowners with older MagnaTrack installations should confirm the specific service options available for their unit with a qualified installer before assuming parts remain in production.
To see exactly what service-call economics and parts availability look like across both product families — with the specific warranty text in hand and the field-service record from our own installations — contact Florida Living Outdoor for a free in-home consultation in Central or South Florida. We install and service both MagnaTrack and OneTrack, and we will walk you through the numbers directly.
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.
Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company) — manufacturer of MagnaTrack. https://progressivescreens.com
Progressive Screens 2023 Generation 4 CAD (dated 08.16.23) — current production engineering specification for MagnaTrack; generational history reference for Generation 1–3 obsolescence.
US Patent 9,719,292 — MagnaTrack magnetic track system. https://patents.google.com/patent/US9719292
US Patent 11,421,474 — MagnaTrack continuation patent. https://patents.google.com/patent/US11421474
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, with direct field experience across multiple years and hundreds of installations referenced in this post. https://floridalivingoutdoor.com