
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.

Two engineering teams, working independently, arrived at the same idea from opposite directions. One used magnetic attraction. The other used mechanical tension. Both teams answered the same question — how do you build a motorized screen track that bends with wind instead of fighting it — and both answers work. If you are shopping for motorized screens in Florida right now, you are almost certainly looking at a motorized screen track system comparison between those two engineering categories. This post explains how each one works, in plain English, with the engineering detail you need to make the decision without a sales pitch.
Two motorized screen systems on the market use free-floating articulating tracks — meaning the inner track can flex and re-seat itself when wind or debris pushes against the screen. MagnaTrack, manufactured by Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company), uses neodymium magnets that pull the track back into position. OneTrack, manufactured by Fenetex, uses precision mechanical springs that push the track back. Both brands also offer hurricane-rated product lines — MagnaTrack Defender (Florida Product Approval F30798) and Fenetex MaxForce (Florida Product Approval FL8637) — engineered for Cat-5 conditions. Here is how each system works, and what that difference means for the homeowner.
The phrase sounds like marketing. It is not. It describes a specific engineering architecture that has replaced the older rigid-track and zipper-track designs across the premium motorized screen category. (We covered the failure modes that those older systems produce in Post 1.)
A free-floating articulating track is a two-part assembly. The outer track mounts to the structure. The inner track — the channel that actually holds the screen edge — floats inside the outer housing, held in alignment by a return force that keeps it seated under normal conditions but releases when wind or debris applies enough load. When the load subsides, the return force pulls or pushes the inner track back to its true position. The screen edge stays attached to the inner track throughout this, so the fabric never torques against a channel that cannot move. The motor never pulls against resistance that should not be there. And the service call that used to be routine — the bound track at year four, the frayed fabric edge at year five, the strained motor at year six — stops happening.
The two answers to "how do you return the inner track to position" are the subject of this post. One uses magnetic pull. One uses a mechanical spring push. Both work. Each has specific characteristics worth understanding before you sign a contract.
MagnaTrack, manufactured by Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company, acquired in 2020), solved the articulating-track problem with neodymium magnets. The original patent for this approach is US Patent 9,719,292, with a continuation patent, US Patent 11,421,474, reflecting refinements over the product's generational history.
Neodymium magnets — the strongest permanent magnets in commercial production — are embedded at regular intervals along the inner wall of the outer track assembly. A snap-on cover conceals them, so when you look at a MagnaTrack installation, you see an ordinary-looking aluminum track with no visible magnets at all. The magnetic force lives behind that cover, holding the inner flexing track in seated alignment against the outer housing.
Under normal daytime operation, the magnetic bond is strong enough to keep the inner track straight and the screen tight in its channel. The homeowner sees an ordinary motorized screen rolling up and down, with no indication that anything unusual is happening inside the side track. That is the point. The engineering is invisible in normal use.
When a gust catches the screen fabric, three things happen almost simultaneously. The fabric catches air and pulls the inner track outward. The magnetic bond — calibrated to hold against steady load but release against transient force — gives way locally along the section of track where the wind pressure is highest. The inner track flexes outward, the screen remains attached to the inner track, and the fabric does not tear. When the wind pressure subsides, the magnetic field pulls the inner track back to its seated position against the outer housing, and the system returns to alignment on its own.
This is what "self-correcting" means in MagnaTrack's marketing language. It is also a reasonable engineering description. The magnetic field is always present, always exerting force, always ready to re-seat the inner track the moment external load drops below the magnetic threshold. There is no motor, no actuator, no sensor involved in the return motion. The physics does the work.
MagnaTrack's patent describes a dual-pull configuration — magnets on both sides of the inner track, creating a balanced magnetic field that keeps the track centered under normal load. The "dual" in dual-pull matters because it allows the system to handle lateral forces from both directions without the inner track drifting toward one side. A single-sided magnetic pull would eventually cause the inner track to settle against one wall of the outer housing, creating uneven friction over thousands of operating cycles. The dual configuration keeps the inner track balanced in the center of the channel, which means wear is distributed symmetrically, and the track runs true over a long service life.
Three characteristics define the MagnaTrack engineering signature. The first is silent operation — there are no moving mechanical parts in the return mechanism, so the self-correcting behavior is literally silent. The second is the broad load tolerance — magnetic fields scale smoothly, so the track handles a light breeze and a strong gust with the same self-correcting behavior, just with different displacement. The third is the hurricane-rated product line: the MagnaTrack Defender system holds Florida Product Approval F30798, meaning it is certified for hurricane-category wind loads up to Category 5 conditions when installed per spec.
Those are real engineering strengths. Any honest comparison of motorized screen track systems has to credit them.
OneTrack, manufactured by Fenetex, solved the same articulating-track problem through the opposite physical principle. Where MagnaTrack pulls with magnetic attraction, OneTrack pushes with mechanical spring tension.
Precision compression springs are embedded along the inner wall of the outer track assembly. The springs are calibrated to a specific spring rate — stiff enough to hold the inner track in seated alignment under normal load, compliant enough to compress when wind or debris applies force to the screen. Under normal operation, the spring tension holds the inner track firmly against the outer housing, and the screen runs straight and quietly.
The engineering detail matters here. Spring rate is a measurable, repeatable property. Progressive Screens' magnetic approach depends on neodymium field strength, which is also measurable but which degrades slowly over decades of thermal cycling. Fenetex's spring approach depends on metallurgy — specifically, spring steel alloy — which has a well-documented fatigue life measured in millions of compression cycles. A properly specified compression spring in a protected environment has a service life that outlasts the product in which it is installed.
The sequence mirrors the magnetic system, with a different return mechanism. The wind catches the fabric. The fabric pulls the inner track outward. The spring tension gives way locally along the affected section of the track. The inner track flexes outward while the screen remains attached. The spring compresses to absorb the deflection.
When the wind subsides, the spring releases its stored potential energy and pushes the inner track back to its seated position. The screen returns to alignment. The motor never worked against an abnormal load. If your screen isn't returning to alignment the way it should after a wind event, how to diagnose hurricane screen issues walks through what to look for before calling a service technician. The fabric was never torqued against a track that could not move. The service call that used to be routine never gets made.
Spring-based systems have a long industrial pedigree for this kind of application — damping, return-to-position, and load-absorption uses where repeatable mechanical behavior matters more than speed. The engineering approach is roughly a century older than the magnetic approach, which is not a disadvantage. It means the failure modes are well understood, the materials are well characterized, and the service life is predictable.
Three characteristics define the OneTrack engineering signature. The first is no reliance on magnetic fields — useful if you are among the homeowners who have seen the growing conversation about magnets and insect behavior [LINK PENDING — Post 5] and want an engineering approach that sidesteps the question. The second is material efficiency — OneTrack's daily-use side track profile is 1.625 inches wide, measured from the Fenetex Design Guide v120253, compared to MagnaTrack's 2.560-inch daily-use profile measured from the Progressive Screens 2023 Gen 4 CAD. That is approximately thirty-seven percent less cross-sectional aluminum in the daily-use application. The material efficiency story gets its own post in this series. [LINK PENDING — Post 6] The third is the hurricane-rated product line: the Fenetex MaxForce system holds Florida Product Approval FL8637, certified for the same Category 5 conditions as the MagnaTrack Defender, under the same Florida Building Code regulatory framework.
Those are real engineering strengths, too. The question for any shopper is not which set of strengths is absolutely better — the question is which set of strengths matches the application, the ownership horizon, and the specific trade-offs the homeowner is willing to accept.
Here is where most comparison content fails, and here is where honesty earns its keep.
Both systems solve the category problem. Both use the free-floating articulating track architecture. Both publish service-call elimination figures above ninety-eight percent — MagnaTrack at approximately ninety-eight percent, OneTrack at approximately ninety-nine percent — figures that are defensible and fall within the statistical noise band of real-world installation variability. Both hold Florida Product Approvals on their hurricane-rated lines. Both are backed by manufacturers with the corporate reach to honor long-term warranty commitments — Progressive Screens through the Hunter Douglas acquisition in 2020, Fenetex through its parallel-brand architecture now rolling out across its authorized dealer network.
The engineering decision between them is not "which one is better." Both are good. The decision is about which engineering approach matches your situation.
Magnetic-pull systems are a strong fit for homeowners who want completely silent operation, who value the dual-pull load-tolerance profile for sites exposed to wind from multiple directions, and who are buying a hurricane-rated system where the Defender product line is the featured brand. The magnetic architecture is mature, patented, widely installed across the Florida market, and backed by a Hunter Douglas parent company that is not going anywhere.
Mechanical spring-push systems are a strong fit for homeowners who want predictable mechanical behavior with no magnetic field, who value material efficiency in daily-use installations, and who want the parts-availability commitment written into Fenetex's warranty language — a commitment we will cover in the next post on backward compatibility [LINK PENDING — Post 3]. The spring architecture has a different engineering pedigree, a different materials story, and a different warranty structure — and for the right homeowner, those differences add up to the right choice.
Three practical differences show up in the ownership experience, and they are worth understanding before you sign.
For daily-use applications — shade, insect, UV, privacy on a covered lanai — both systems run reliably across a ten-year ownership horizon. The functional differences are small. OneTrack's material efficiency shows up in lighter mounting loads and a narrower visual profile, which some homeowners prefer aesthetically. MagnaTrack's silent operation and dual-pull balance show up in completely quiet cycling, which other homeowners prefer. Neither is a reliability difference. Both are differences in preference within a shared performance category.
For hurricane-rated installations in exposed locations, both systems perform. MagnaTrack Defender and Fenetex MaxForce both hold Florida Product Approvals and are engineered to the same regulatory wind-load and impact standards. Both use heavier-gauge aluminum profiles than the daily-use lines because the Florida Building Code requires it, so the material-efficiency story does not apply at the storm level. The decision at this tier comes down to dealer availability, parts supply chain, and architectural integration.
For long-term wear at year ten and beyond, the engineering approach is only half the story. The other half is the manufacturer's parts-availability commitment and the warranty language that binds them to it. The push-vs-pull distinction is the engineering framework. The warranty distinction is the ownership framework [LINK PENDING — Post 3]. You need both to make a complete decision.
Zipper-track motorized screens are still sold in the Florida market. They are not bad products for their price point, but they are not competing in the same engineering category as MagnaTrack or OneTrack. If you want to see how the full motorized screen category stacks up — zipper systems included — the Top Ten Outdoor Motorized Screens breakdown ranks them side by side. If you are comparing a zipper system to either of the free-floating articulating track systems, you are comparing the previous generation to the current generation.
The functional difference shows up in three places. Zipper teeth fail over time — the zipper is a wear surface, and wear accumulates. Zipper tracks struggle with thermal expansion mismatches between the aluminum track and the vinyl zipper material. And zipper tracks cannot self-correct under wind load — they either hold the screen or release it, with no intermediate articulation. Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack articulate, which eliminates the service-call failures that zipper systems still produce.
This matters for a homeowner doing a motorized screen track system comparison because a budget-tier zipper system and a premium free-floating articulating system can rank for the same search terms but will not deliver the same ownership experience. The price difference between the two categories is not a feature premium. It is the cost of a different engineering architecture.
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, and carries both manufacturers' hurricane-rated product lines as featured brands.
Push vs pull describes the two engineering categories currently leading the premium motorized screen market. Magnetic-pull systems like MagnaTrack use neodymium magnets to return the inner track to position after wind or debris displaces it. Mechanical-push systems like OneTrack use precision compression springs that push the inner track back to alignment. Both are free-floating articulating track systems, and both solve the same category-reliability problem using opposite physical principles.
Neither is universally better. Both achieve approximately ninety-nine percent service-call elimination through the shared free-floating articulating track architecture. The differences are in the engineering characteristics — MagnaTrack offers silent operation and dual-pull balance, OneTrack offers no magnetic field, and roughly thirty-seven percent less cross-sectional aluminum in the daily-use track. The right answer depends on your application, your ownership horizon, and your preferences on those trade-offs.
A free-floating articulating track is a two-part track assembly. The outer track mounts to the structure. The inner track — which holds the screen edge — floats inside the outer housing, held in seated alignment by a return force. Under wind or debris load, the inner track flexes outward. When the load subsides, the return force pulls or pushes the inner track back to alignment. The screen never detaches, the motor never strains, and the fabric never torques against a fixed channel.
The neodymium magnets used in MagnaTrack are embedded behind snap-on covers in the side track assembly and operate at engineered field strengths optimized for track function. The growing industry conversation around magnets and insect behavior is a legitimate one worth following — we cover it in Post 5 of this series [LINK PENDING — Post 5]. No peer-reviewed research has specifically measured insect behavior at the field strengths produced by residential motorized screen installations. The question is open.
Both brands offer hurricane-rated product lines certified for Category 5 wind conditions under the Florida Building Code. MagnaTrack Defender holds Florida Product Approval F30798. Fenetex MaxForce holds Florida Product Approval FL8637. Daily-use motorized screens from either manufacturer are not hurricane-rated and should be retracted ahead of named-storm events.
Yes, both systems are designed for new construction and retrofit installations. OneTrack's narrower daily-use track profile may fit more retrofit scenarios on older Florida homes where the structural opening is dimensionally constrained. MagnaTrack's broader profile is standard on most new-construction openings designed after 2015. A qualified dealer should survey the opening and specify the appropriate system for the application.
A well-designed free-floating articulating track system should last fifteen years or more in a properly specified installation. Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack deliver that service life in the field. The older zipper-track and rigid-track systems commonly fail in years four through six from accumulated track strain that the articulating architecture eliminates.
To discuss which engineering approach fits your project, 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 engineering trade-offs, the warranty language, and the application fit — without a sales pitch.

Two engineering teams, working independently, arrived at the same idea from opposite directions. One used magnetic attraction. The other used mechanical tension. Both teams answered the same question — how do you build a motorized screen track that bends with wind instead of fighting it — and both answers work. If you are shopping for motorized screens in Florida right now, you are almost certainly looking at a motorized screen track system comparison between those two engineering categories. This post explains how each one works, in plain English, with the engineering detail you need to make the decision without a sales pitch.
Two motorized screen systems on the market use free-floating articulating tracks — meaning the inner track can flex and re-seat itself when wind or debris pushes against the screen. MagnaTrack, manufactured by Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company), uses neodymium magnets that pull the track back into position. OneTrack, manufactured by Fenetex, uses precision mechanical springs that push the track back. Both brands also offer hurricane-rated product lines — MagnaTrack Defender (Florida Product Approval F30798) and Fenetex MaxForce (Florida Product Approval FL8637) — engineered for Cat-5 conditions. Here is how each system works, and what that difference means for the homeowner.
The phrase sounds like marketing. It is not. It describes a specific engineering architecture that has replaced the older rigid-track and zipper-track designs across the premium motorized screen category. (We covered the failure modes that those older systems produce in Post 1.)
A free-floating articulating track is a two-part assembly. The outer track mounts to the structure. The inner track — the channel that actually holds the screen edge — floats inside the outer housing, held in alignment by a return force that keeps it seated under normal conditions but releases when wind or debris applies enough load. When the load subsides, the return force pulls or pushes the inner track back to its true position. The screen edge stays attached to the inner track throughout this, so the fabric never torques against a channel that cannot move. The motor never pulls against resistance that should not be there. And the service call that used to be routine — the bound track at year four, the frayed fabric edge at year five, the strained motor at year six — stops happening.
The two answers to "how do you return the inner track to position" are the subject of this post. One uses magnetic pull. One uses a mechanical spring push. Both work. Each has specific characteristics worth understanding before you sign a contract.
MagnaTrack, manufactured by Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company, acquired in 2020), solved the articulating-track problem with neodymium magnets. The original patent for this approach is US Patent 9,719,292, with a continuation patent, US Patent 11,421,474, reflecting refinements over the product's generational history.
Neodymium magnets — the strongest permanent magnets in commercial production — are embedded at regular intervals along the inner wall of the outer track assembly. A snap-on cover conceals them, so when you look at a MagnaTrack installation, you see an ordinary-looking aluminum track with no visible magnets at all. The magnetic force lives behind that cover, holding the inner flexing track in seated alignment against the outer housing.
Under normal daytime operation, the magnetic bond is strong enough to keep the inner track straight and the screen tight in its channel. The homeowner sees an ordinary motorized screen rolling up and down, with no indication that anything unusual is happening inside the side track. That is the point. The engineering is invisible in normal use.
When a gust catches the screen fabric, three things happen almost simultaneously. The fabric catches air and pulls the inner track outward. The magnetic bond — calibrated to hold against steady load but release against transient force — gives way locally along the section of track where the wind pressure is highest. The inner track flexes outward, the screen remains attached to the inner track, and the fabric does not tear. When the wind pressure subsides, the magnetic field pulls the inner track back to its seated position against the outer housing, and the system returns to alignment on its own.
This is what "self-correcting" means in MagnaTrack's marketing language. It is also a reasonable engineering description. The magnetic field is always present, always exerting force, always ready to re-seat the inner track the moment external load drops below the magnetic threshold. There is no motor, no actuator, no sensor involved in the return motion. The physics does the work.
MagnaTrack's patent describes a dual-pull configuration — magnets on both sides of the inner track, creating a balanced magnetic field that keeps the track centered under normal load. The "dual" in dual-pull matters because it allows the system to handle lateral forces from both directions without the inner track drifting toward one side. A single-sided magnetic pull would eventually cause the inner track to settle against one wall of the outer housing, creating uneven friction over thousands of operating cycles. The dual configuration keeps the inner track balanced in the center of the channel, which means wear is distributed symmetrically, and the track runs true over a long service life.
Three characteristics define the MagnaTrack engineering signature. The first is silent operation — there are no moving mechanical parts in the return mechanism, so the self-correcting behavior is literally silent. The second is the broad load tolerance — magnetic fields scale smoothly, so the track handles a light breeze and a strong gust with the same self-correcting behavior, just with different displacement. The third is the hurricane-rated product line: the MagnaTrack Defender system holds Florida Product Approval F30798, meaning it is certified for hurricane-category wind loads up to Category 5 conditions when installed per spec.
Those are real engineering strengths. Any honest comparison of motorized screen track systems has to credit them.
OneTrack, manufactured by Fenetex, solved the same articulating-track problem through the opposite physical principle. Where MagnaTrack pulls with magnetic attraction, OneTrack pushes with mechanical spring tension.
Precision compression springs are embedded along the inner wall of the outer track assembly. The springs are calibrated to a specific spring rate — stiff enough to hold the inner track in seated alignment under normal load, compliant enough to compress when wind or debris applies force to the screen. Under normal operation, the spring tension holds the inner track firmly against the outer housing, and the screen runs straight and quietly.
The engineering detail matters here. Spring rate is a measurable, repeatable property. Progressive Screens' magnetic approach depends on neodymium field strength, which is also measurable but which degrades slowly over decades of thermal cycling. Fenetex's spring approach depends on metallurgy — specifically, spring steel alloy — which has a well-documented fatigue life measured in millions of compression cycles. A properly specified compression spring in a protected environment has a service life that outlasts the product in which it is installed.
The sequence mirrors the magnetic system, with a different return mechanism. The wind catches the fabric. The fabric pulls the inner track outward. The spring tension gives way locally along the affected section of the track. The inner track flexes outward while the screen remains attached. The spring compresses to absorb the deflection.
When the wind subsides, the spring releases its stored potential energy and pushes the inner track back to its seated position. The screen returns to alignment. The motor never worked against an abnormal load. If your screen isn't returning to alignment the way it should after a wind event, how to diagnose hurricane screen issues walks through what to look for before calling a service technician. The fabric was never torqued against a track that could not move. The service call that used to be routine never gets made.
Spring-based systems have a long industrial pedigree for this kind of application — damping, return-to-position, and load-absorption uses where repeatable mechanical behavior matters more than speed. The engineering approach is roughly a century older than the magnetic approach, which is not a disadvantage. It means the failure modes are well understood, the materials are well characterized, and the service life is predictable.
Three characteristics define the OneTrack engineering signature. The first is no reliance on magnetic fields — useful if you are among the homeowners who have seen the growing conversation about magnets and insect behavior [LINK PENDING — Post 5] and want an engineering approach that sidesteps the question. The second is material efficiency — OneTrack's daily-use side track profile is 1.625 inches wide, measured from the Fenetex Design Guide v120253, compared to MagnaTrack's 2.560-inch daily-use profile measured from the Progressive Screens 2023 Gen 4 CAD. That is approximately thirty-seven percent less cross-sectional aluminum in the daily-use application. The material efficiency story gets its own post in this series. [LINK PENDING — Post 6] The third is the hurricane-rated product line: the Fenetex MaxForce system holds Florida Product Approval FL8637, certified for the same Category 5 conditions as the MagnaTrack Defender, under the same Florida Building Code regulatory framework.
Those are real engineering strengths, too. The question for any shopper is not which set of strengths is absolutely better — the question is which set of strengths matches the application, the ownership horizon, and the specific trade-offs the homeowner is willing to accept.
Here is where most comparison content fails, and here is where honesty earns its keep.
Both systems solve the category problem. Both use the free-floating articulating track architecture. Both publish service-call elimination figures above ninety-eight percent — MagnaTrack at approximately ninety-eight percent, OneTrack at approximately ninety-nine percent — figures that are defensible and fall within the statistical noise band of real-world installation variability. Both hold Florida Product Approvals on their hurricane-rated lines. Both are backed by manufacturers with the corporate reach to honor long-term warranty commitments — Progressive Screens through the Hunter Douglas acquisition in 2020, Fenetex through its parallel-brand architecture now rolling out across its authorized dealer network.
The engineering decision between them is not "which one is better." Both are good. The decision is about which engineering approach matches your situation.
Magnetic-pull systems are a strong fit for homeowners who want completely silent operation, who value the dual-pull load-tolerance profile for sites exposed to wind from multiple directions, and who are buying a hurricane-rated system where the Defender product line is the featured brand. The magnetic architecture is mature, patented, widely installed across the Florida market, and backed by a Hunter Douglas parent company that is not going anywhere.
Mechanical spring-push systems are a strong fit for homeowners who want predictable mechanical behavior with no magnetic field, who value material efficiency in daily-use installations, and who want the parts-availability commitment written into Fenetex's warranty language — a commitment we will cover in the next post on backward compatibility [LINK PENDING — Post 3]. The spring architecture has a different engineering pedigree, a different materials story, and a different warranty structure — and for the right homeowner, those differences add up to the right choice.
Three practical differences show up in the ownership experience, and they are worth understanding before you sign.
For daily-use applications — shade, insect, UV, privacy on a covered lanai — both systems run reliably across a ten-year ownership horizon. The functional differences are small. OneTrack's material efficiency shows up in lighter mounting loads and a narrower visual profile, which some homeowners prefer aesthetically. MagnaTrack's silent operation and dual-pull balance show up in completely quiet cycling, which other homeowners prefer. Neither is a reliability difference. Both are differences in preference within a shared performance category.
For hurricane-rated installations in exposed locations, both systems perform. MagnaTrack Defender and Fenetex MaxForce both hold Florida Product Approvals and are engineered to the same regulatory wind-load and impact standards. Both use heavier-gauge aluminum profiles than the daily-use lines because the Florida Building Code requires it, so the material-efficiency story does not apply at the storm level. The decision at this tier comes down to dealer availability, parts supply chain, and architectural integration.
For long-term wear at year ten and beyond, the engineering approach is only half the story. The other half is the manufacturer's parts-availability commitment and the warranty language that binds them to it. The push-vs-pull distinction is the engineering framework. The warranty distinction is the ownership framework [LINK PENDING — Post 3]. You need both to make a complete decision.
Zipper-track motorized screens are still sold in the Florida market. They are not bad products for their price point, but they are not competing in the same engineering category as MagnaTrack or OneTrack. If you want to see how the full motorized screen category stacks up — zipper systems included — the Top Ten Outdoor Motorized Screens breakdown ranks them side by side. If you are comparing a zipper system to either of the free-floating articulating track systems, you are comparing the previous generation to the current generation.
The functional difference shows up in three places. Zipper teeth fail over time — the zipper is a wear surface, and wear accumulates. Zipper tracks struggle with thermal expansion mismatches between the aluminum track and the vinyl zipper material. And zipper tracks cannot self-correct under wind load — they either hold the screen or release it, with no intermediate articulation. Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack articulate, which eliminates the service-call failures that zipper systems still produce.
This matters for a homeowner doing a motorized screen track system comparison because a budget-tier zipper system and a premium free-floating articulating system can rank for the same search terms but will not deliver the same ownership experience. The price difference between the two categories is not a feature premium. It is the cost of a different engineering architecture.
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, and carries both manufacturers' hurricane-rated product lines as featured brands.
Push vs pull describes the two engineering categories currently leading the premium motorized screen market. Magnetic-pull systems like MagnaTrack use neodymium magnets to return the inner track to position after wind or debris displaces it. Mechanical-push systems like OneTrack use precision compression springs that push the inner track back to alignment. Both are free-floating articulating track systems, and both solve the same category-reliability problem using opposite physical principles.
Neither is universally better. Both achieve approximately ninety-nine percent service-call elimination through the shared free-floating articulating track architecture. The differences are in the engineering characteristics — MagnaTrack offers silent operation and dual-pull balance, OneTrack offers no magnetic field, and roughly thirty-seven percent less cross-sectional aluminum in the daily-use track. The right answer depends on your application, your ownership horizon, and your preferences on those trade-offs.
A free-floating articulating track is a two-part track assembly. The outer track mounts to the structure. The inner track — which holds the screen edge — floats inside the outer housing, held in seated alignment by a return force. Under wind or debris load, the inner track flexes outward. When the load subsides, the return force pulls or pushes the inner track back to alignment. The screen never detaches, the motor never strains, and the fabric never torques against a fixed channel.
The neodymium magnets used in MagnaTrack are embedded behind snap-on covers in the side track assembly and operate at engineered field strengths optimized for track function. The growing industry conversation around magnets and insect behavior is a legitimate one worth following — we cover it in Post 5 of this series [LINK PENDING — Post 5]. No peer-reviewed research has specifically measured insect behavior at the field strengths produced by residential motorized screen installations. The question is open.
Both brands offer hurricane-rated product lines certified for Category 5 wind conditions under the Florida Building Code. MagnaTrack Defender holds Florida Product Approval F30798. Fenetex MaxForce holds Florida Product Approval FL8637. Daily-use motorized screens from either manufacturer are not hurricane-rated and should be retracted ahead of named-storm events.
Yes, both systems are designed for new construction and retrofit installations. OneTrack's narrower daily-use track profile may fit more retrofit scenarios on older Florida homes where the structural opening is dimensionally constrained. MagnaTrack's broader profile is standard on most new-construction openings designed after 2015. A qualified dealer should survey the opening and specify the appropriate system for the application.
A well-designed free-floating articulating track system should last fifteen years or more in a properly specified installation. Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack deliver that service life in the field. The older zipper-track and rigid-track systems commonly fail in years four through six from accumulated track strain that the articulating architecture eliminates.
To discuss which engineering approach fits your project, 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 engineering trade-offs, the warranty language, and the application fit — without a sales pitch.