
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.

The premium motorized screen category runs on aluminum. The housings, the side tracks, the weight bars, the roll tubes — nearly every visible structural element is extruded aluminum, engineered to a specific profile that balances strength, weight, weather resistance, and manufacturing cost. The total aluminum mass in a motorized screen system is not a number most homeowners ever see, but it shapes the installation experience in real ways. It decides whether the system hangs off a wood beam or requires structural steel reinforcement. It sets a floor on the raw-material component of the manufacturer's price. It influences how the product performs over a ten-year ownership horizon. And in the daily-use category — shade, insect, UV, privacy applications on covered lanais — it is one of the places where the two leading free-floating articulating track systems differ in measurable ways.
For daily-use motorized screens, OneTrack's self-adjusting mechanical spring design achieves the same reliability outcome as magnet-based systems with measurably less aluminum. OneTrack's side track is 1.625 inches wide, per the Fenetex Design Guide v120253. MagnaTrack's comparable daily-use side track is 2.560 inches wide, per the Progressive Screens 2023 Gen 4 CAD — approximately a 37 percent cross-section reduction at the daily-use product tier. For hurricane-rated applications, both brands use heavier-gauge profiles as the Florida Building Code requires, and the material-efficiency story does not apply at the storm tier. This is specifically a daily-use engineering story. Here is what that reduced aluminum mass means for installation, pricing stability, and long-term value.
Before the material efficiency argument makes sense, the engineering baseline has to be clear. A free-floating articulating track system is not a minimum-material design problem — it is a right-material design problem. The outer track must support the inner track under wind loads without flexing in a way that defeats articulation. The weight bar must be rigid enough to keep the screen fabric taut across the full width of the opening. The housing has to resist wind uplift and debris impact over decades of outdoor exposure. Under-specify any of these elements, and the system fails. Over-specify them, and the homeowner pays for aluminum they did not need.
Both MagnaTrack and OneTrack are engineered to the correct specifications for their intended duty. That is not in question. The question is what "correct specification" looks like when your return mechanism is a set of neodymium magnets versus a set of precision compression springs — and the answer turns out to be different enough to show up in a measured comparison.
The push-vs-pull engineering framework from Post 2 [LINK PENDING — Post 2] matters here because it sets up why the two systems arrive at different aluminum specifications. Magnetic pull requires an outer track stiff enough to support a magnetic return load across the full track length, thereby defining the cross-section that the manufacturer must specify. A mechanical spring push distributes the return load differently along the track, giving the engineering team a different set of constraints to optimize against. Neither approach is doing it wrong. They are solving the same category problem inside different material envelopes.
The numbers that follow are taken from primary engineering documentation on both sides.
The MagnaTrack daily-use side track is specified at 2.560 inches wide, per the Progressive Screens 2023 Generation 4 CAD documentation dated 08.16.23. This is the current production specification for the MagnaTrack daily-use product line, protected under US Patent 9,719,292. The cross-section is engineered to hold the neodymium magnet array along the inner wall and maintain the dual-pull balance that returns the inner articulating track to alignment after wind displacement.
The OneTrack daily-use side track is specified at 1.625 inches wide, per the Fenetex Design Guide v120253. This is the current production specification for the OneTrack daily-use product line. The cross-section is engineered to house the precision compression spring array along the inner wall and maintain the spring-return function that performs the equivalent articulating-track work.
The difference — 1.625 inches versus 2.560 inches — is roughly a 37 percent reduction in the cross-sectional area of the aluminum at the daily-use product tier. That number is not an extrapolation. It is a straight measurement of the primary engineering documentation that both manufacturers use to specify their daily-use tracks. A Fenetex dealer and a Progressive Screens dealer can pull the same pages from their own design documents and arrive at the same two measurements.
What this cross-section number does not tell you directly is the weight-per-linear-foot of the finished extrusion, which is a function of cross-section geometry plus wall thickness, plus internal rib structure. Neither manufacturer publishes weight per linear foot in publicly available consumer documentation at the time of this writing, so we are citing the geometry and letting the reader infer the material mass in proportion. The physics is straightforward — a smaller cross-section means less aluminum billet per linear foot of extrusion — but the exact weight ratio requires access to the full internal drawings for each profile.
This is the engineering explanation that turns the measurement into a meaningful story. Both systems need structural rigidity in the side track to do their job. OneTrack's spring-based approach can achieve that structural rigidity with less aluminum because the spring mechanism itself carries some of the structural load that the magnetic approach must distribute through the aluminum cross-section alone.
A compression spring, at its engineering core, is a load-carrying element. It absorbs force, stores potential energy, releases it on a predictable curve, and returns to its neutral position. When the spring is embedded as the return mechanism in a free-floating articulating track, it does two things at once. It provides the return force that reseats the inner track after displacement — that is its designed purpose. And it contributes to the overall stiffness of the track assembly under load, because the spring is mechanically coupled to both the outer track wall and the inner flexing track. The spring, in other words, is part of the structural system, not just a component bolted inside it.
A magnetic pull mechanism, by contrast, is a non-structural return mechanism. The magnetic field generates a return force across an air gap. It does not carry mechanical load through the track wall. It does not add stiffness to the aluminum cross-section. Everything the aluminum cross-section needs to do — hold the magnets in place, resist wind load, maintain dual-pull balance, support the inner track through all of its motion — has to be done by the aluminum alone, because the magnetic system has no structural coupling to the track housing.
That engineering difference is why the two approaches yield different daily-use side-track specifications. It is not that Fenetex is cutting corners on aluminum mass. It is that the spring-based return mechanism provides structural functionality that the magnetic-pull system cannot, thereby allowing the aluminum cross-section to be sized more efficiently. Both products meet the engineering duty for their intended application. One does it with less aluminum.
This is the part of the material efficiency discussion that honest content must include, because omitting it would misrepresent the product comparison.
Hurricane-rated motorized screen products use substantially heavier-gauge aluminum profiles than the daily-use lines. The hurricane profiles are specified to Florida Building Code wind-load and debris-impact standards, and both brands engineer to those standards through their regulatory approvals — MagnaTrack Defender under Florida Product Approval F30798, Fenetex MaxForce under Florida Product Approval FL8637.
The published profiles at the hurricane tier tell a different story than the daily-use comparison. Per the Fenetex Design Guide, the MaxForce hurricane track profile is 1.31 inches by 3.29 inches. Per the Progressive Screens 2023 Gen 4 CAD, the MagnaTrack hurricane-weight bar profile measures 1.250 inches by 3.063 inches. These are comparable dimensions — roughly at parity, with MagnaTrack's hurricane weight bar actually slightly smaller in both axes, depending on which specific components you measure. At the hurricane product level, the material-efficiency argument that the daily-use comparison supports either disappears or inverts slightly.
This is not a contradiction in the engineering — it is the engineering meeting the regulatory specification. The Florida Building Code does not care which engineering category you use (magnetic or spring) for your hurricane product. It cares whether the finished product holds the required wind load and passes the debris impact test. Both brands meet those requirements. Both brands use the aluminum mass required to meet their needs. The daily-use material efficiency story is a story about the daily-use product tier specifically, and it should not be generalized to the hurricane tier.
A shopper looking at a hurricane-rated motorized screen decision should ignore the material efficiency argument entirely and make the decision on other variables — engineering category (covered in Post 2 [LINK PENDING — Post 2]), warranty language (covered in Post 3 [LINK PENDING — Post 3]), design philosophy and parts availability (covered in Post 4 [LINK PENDING — Post 4]). The material efficiency advantage is specifically a daily-use story.
Three practical consequences stem from the material-efficiency difference at the daily-use tier, and they all show up in the installation experience.
The first is lighter weight on the host structure. A motorized screen hangs off the lanai structure — a beam, a header, a concrete lintel, an engineered wood truss — and that structure has to carry the weight of the full assembly plus the dynamic load of the screen in operation. On a typical twelve-foot opening, the side tracks alone account for a significant share of the static weight. Less aluminum cross-section means less static load on the host structure. For new construction, this is usually a non-issue because the opening is designed to the motorized screen spec. For retrofit installations in existing homes — particularly older Florida homes where the lanai was framed before modern motorized screens became standard — the lighter load can be the difference between a straightforward installation and a conversation with a structural engineer.
The second is simpler mounting hardware. A narrower side track requires less aggressive mounting fasteners to carry the same weight, and the narrower profile often allows the installer to use surface-mounted brackets where a wider profile would require embedded anchors. This affects installation labor time, the finish carpentry's impact on the host structure, and the number of visible fasteners after the job is done. None of these are dramatic differences on any individual install, but they accumulate across the full installer portfolio over the years of jobs.
The third is broader substrate compatibility. The narrower track fits more retrofit scenarios where the structural opening is dimensionally tight. We run into this regularly on older South Florida homes where the lanai was framed to a standard that did not anticipate a 2.56-inch side track footprint on each side of a ten-foot opening. The extra three-quarter-inch per side that the wider track demands can force the installer into a more invasive mounting plan, a different track location, or in some cases a decision not to proceed with that specific opening at all. The narrower OneTrack profile survives more of those dimensional audits without modification.
Aluminum is a commodity with commodity-price dynamics. The spot price of aluminum billet is published daily on the London Metal Exchange and the Shanghai Futures Exchange, and it moves with the same macroeconomic drivers as copper, steel, and zinc. When aluminum runs at $4,000 per metric ton, a motorized screen manufacturer's cost structure is another matter. When aluminum runs at $6,000, the cost structure is different. The raw material component of any aluminum-intensive product has been volatile for the past five years.
A motorized screen product family that uses approximately 37 percent less cross-sectional aluminum in its daily-use side tracks is, by definition, less exposed to that commodity volatility. The raw-material component of the manufactured cost is a smaller share of the total cost, which gives the manufacturer more flexibility to absorb aluminum price swings without passing them through to dealers and homeowners. This does not mean OneTrack is always priced below MagnaTrack at retail — there are many other factors in retail pricing, including dealer margin, warranty reserve, brand equity, and regional demand. What it means is that the material-cost floor underneath OneTrack's daily-use pricing is lower, which tends to make the pricing more stable across aluminum cycles.
This is a small point in any single-year purchase decision and a meaningful point across a fifteen-year ownership horizon that includes replacement parts pricing. Post 8 covers the fifteen-year total cost of ownership math in detail [LINK PENDING — Post 8], and the material-cost floor is one of several variables that feed into it.
Aluminum has a specific environmental profile. Primary aluminum production — smelting bauxite into aluminum billet — is energy-intensive. Recycled aluminum production uses approximately 5% of the energy required for primary production, which is why the aluminum industry has some of the highest recycling rates in the commodity metals space. Any product that uses less aluminum at the manufacturing stage has a proportionally smaller primary-aluminum footprint, even before you consider end-of-life recycling.
A 37 percent reduction in the daily-use side track cross-section translates to a proportional reduction in the primary aluminum footprint of each finished OneTrack daily-use installation. Over a full production run across the OneTrack dealer network, that adds up to real material. Over a fifteen-year product life that is designed for backward-compatible parts availability — the warranty language we covered in Post 3 [LINK PENDING — Post 3] — the embodied-carbon advantage compounds. A lighter-material product that also resists obsolescence is structurally a lower-impact product across its full lifecycle.
This is a smaller point for any individual homeowner than the installation and pricing points above. For architects and custom builders speccing motorized screens into LEED-tracking projects or sustainability-conscious client portfolios, it is a real data point worth having in the materials conversation.
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.
A motorized screen's aluminum content is concentrated in four components: the housing, the two side tracks, and the weight bar. Total mass depends on opening dimensions, profile specifications, and product tier. A daily-use motorized screen uses substantially less aluminum than a hurricane-rated equivalent, because the Florida Building Code requires heavier-gauge hurricane profiles. On the daily-use side track specifically, OneTrack's 1.625-inch profile uses approximately 37 percent less cross-sectional aluminum than MagnaTrack's 2.560-inch profile.
On the daily-use product tier, yes — OneTrack's side track is 1.625 inches wide versus MagnaTrack's 2.560 inches, an approximately 37 percent cross-section reduction that translates proportionally into lower linear-foot weight. In the hurricane-rated product tier, the two products are roughly at parity, with MagnaTrack's hurricane weight bar slightly smaller than MaxForce's along both axes. The material-efficiency story applies specifically to daily-use applications.
A motorized screen system's weight depends on opening dimensions and product tier. On a typical 12-foot daily-use opening, the finished installation's weight is comfortably supported by a properly framed lanai structure. On hurricane-rated openings, the heavier aluminum profiles required by the Florida Building Code add noticeable weight — and the structural host calculation matters more. Retrofit installations in older homes sometimes require a structural engineering review; new construction is almost always framed to the motorized screen spec from the start.
No. The daily-use material efficiency in OneTrack's spring-based design comes from a different engineering approach to structural load distribution, not from under-specifying the aluminum. Compression springs carry mechanical load through the track assembly in a way that magnetic return mechanisms cannot, which allows the aluminum cross-section to be sized more efficiently for daily-use duty. Both systems meet their engineering specifications. For hurricane-rated products, both brands use heavier-gauge aluminum, as required by the Florida Building Code.
Retrofit installations on older homes often come down to dimensional constraints at the structural opening. Narrower side tracks fit more of these scenarios without invasive structural modifications. OneTrack's 1.625-inch daily-use side track footprint is more retrofit-friendly than MagnaTrack's 2.560-inch profile. A qualified installer should survey the specific opening and confirm which product family fits the constraint set before committing to a specific brand.
The primary environmental impact is the embodied aluminum at manufacturing — primary aluminum production is energy-intensive, though the industry has high recycling rates. A product family that uses less aluminum per daily-use installation has a proportionally lower primary-aluminum footprint. Over a fifteen-year ownership horizon with backward-compatible parts availability, the embodied-carbon advantage compounds. This is a real data point for sustainability-conscious specifications, though it is a smaller decision driver for most individual homeowners than installation fit or warranty terms.
At the hurricane product tier, yes, the two brands are roughly comparable in aluminum specifications. Both engineers to the Florida Building Code hurricane wind-load and debris-impact standards. MagnaTrack Defender holds Florida Product Approval F30798. Fenetex MaxForce holds Florida Product Approval FL8637. The daily-use material-efficiency story does not apply to the hurricane tier. Hurricane decisions should be made on other variables — engineering category, warranty language, parts availability, and dealer support.
To look at both engineering categories side by side — with the actual profiles in hand and a dimensional survey of your specific opening — 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 material specifications directly so you can make the decision on your own terms.
Fenetex / OneTrack — manufacturer of OneTrack motorized screens and MaxForce hurricane-rated screens. https://onetrackscreens.com
Fenetex Design Guide v120253 — engineering specification document for OneTrack daily-use (1.625-inch side track) and MaxForce hurricane (1.31" × 3.29" track profile) product families.
Progressive Screens (a Hunter Douglas Company) — manufacturer of MagnaTrack and MagnaTrack Defender. https://progressivescreens.com
Progressive Screens 2023 Gen 4 CAD (dated 08.16.23) — engineering specification document for MagnaTrack daily-use (2.560-inch side track) and MagnaTrack Defender hurricane (1.250" × 3.063" weight bar) product families.
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
London Metal Exchange aluminum cash price — daily spot-price reference for aluminum billet commodity pricing. https://www.lme.com
Florida Living Outdoor LLC — installer and service provider for both MagnaTrack and OneTrack systems in Central and South Florida. https://floridalivingoutdoor.com