
THE INSTALLATION WINDOW
"From Consultation to Completion: The Real Timeline Nobody Shares"
Here's what most websites won't tell you: from the moment you say "yes" to the moment your screens actually work, there's a timeline. And that timeline has nothing to do with how much you want it to happen faster.
Measurements. Manufacturing. Shipping. Scheduling. Installation. Fine-tuning.
Each step takes time. Not because anyone is slow, not because the process is inefficient, but because quality takes what it takes. Custom products require custom processes. Precision requires patience. And the screens that will protect your outdoor space for the next decade deserve more than a rushed job because someone didn't understand the calendar.
The homeowners who end up frustrated aren't the ones who waited too long to start. They're the ones who didn't know how long the process actually takes — who assumed "ready by summer" meant they could call in May.
Understanding the timeline changes everything. It transforms unrealistic expectations into realistic plans. It turns frustration into preparation. It separates the homeowners who enjoy their summer from the ones who spend it learning hard lessons about lead times.
This is the installation window. Know it well.
The Consultation Phase
Every One-Track installation begins with understanding.
A dealer visits your space — not a quick drive-by, but a thorough assessment. They measure. They observe. They ask questions about how you use the space, what you want the screens to accomplish, what concerns you've had with outdoor living.
First step, first decisions, first progress.
This isn't paperwork. This is foundation-building. The measurements taken during consultation become the specifications for your custom screens. The conversation about usage patterns shapes the recommendations for screen types and features. The questions you ask — and the answers you receive — determine whether the final installation matches your actual needs or just approximates them.
The consultation phase typically takes one to two weeks from initial contact to completed assessment. That timeline varies by dealer availability, which brings us back to the Great Defrost advantage: dealers have more time in February than they do in June. The February consultation gets ninety minutes. The June consultation, if you can schedule one at all, gets whatever time is available between the other consultations filling every slot.
What happens during consultation sets the trajectory for everything that follows. Rushed consultations produce rushed specifications. Rushed specifications produce results that might not quite fit — screens that work, but perhaps not as well as they could have. Thorough consultations produce thorough specifications. Thorough specifications produce results that match exactly what you wanted.
The time you invest here pays dividends throughout the process.
Find a One-Track dealer and schedule your consultation →
Manufacturing Realities
One-Track screens aren't pulled from a warehouse shelf. They're built for you — your measurements, your specifications, your configuration.
This matters. It's the difference between a generic solution that approximately fits and a precision solution that exactly fits. But precision manufacturing requires time.
Built for you. Measured for you. Manufactured for you.
After consultation, your specifications go to production. The frame gets cut to your dimensions. The screen material gets prepared for your configuration. The motor and track systems get assembled for your specific setup. This isn't like ordering something from a website and waiting for it to ship from inventory. This is made-to-order manufacturing that doesn't start until your order is placed.
Manufacturing lead times typically run two to four weeks, depending on complexity and current production volume. During peak season, when everyone who waited until May places orders simultaneously, lead times extend. During the off-season, when early planners place orders, lead times compress.
This is where the Great Defrost advantage compounds. Early orders enter production when capacity is available. Late orders enter production when capacity is strained. Same manufacturing process. Different timing. Different lead times.
The homeowners who understand manufacturing realities don't get frustrated by them. They plan around them. They place orders early enough that production happens during the efficient season rather than the compressed season.
Learn why One-Track's manufacturing process produces superior results →
The Installation Day(s)
Your screens arrive. Now they need to become part of your home.
Professional installation isn't just bolting hardware to your patio structure. It's ensuring alignment, testing operation, integrating with your home systems, and confirming that everything works exactly as intended. The installation team that arrives at your home represents the culmination of everything that came before — consultation, specification, manufacturing — and determines whether that preparation translates into daily satisfaction.
Installation takes anywhere from half a day to several days, depending on scope. A single screen on a simple structure might install in hours. A comprehensive system with multiple screens, smart home integration, and complex mounting requirements might take two or three days.
Precise installation. Thorough testing. Complete integration.
What doesn't vary is the importance of doing it right. Screens that install correctly operate reliably for years. Screens that install carelessly develop problems — alignment issues, operational quirks, premature wear. The installation phase deserves the same attention as every other phase.
Scheduling installation involves coordinating your availability, the installation team's schedule, and reasonable weather conditions. This coordination takes time, which is why early planning matters. The homeowner who scheduled in February has installation slots available throughout spring. The homeowner who scheduled in June takes whatever slot opens up — potentially weeks or months after ordering.
Counting Backward From Summer
Let's do the math.
Memorial Day weekend typically falls in late May. Many homeowners consider this the unofficial start of outdoor season — the first long weekend when weather reliably cooperates and gatherings feel natural. If your goal is "ready by Memorial Day," what does the timeline look like?
Work backward from Memorial Day. Each step has duration. Each step connects to the next.
Installation needs to happen by mid-May to allow for any fine-tuning before the holiday weekend. Backing up from there: manufacturing needs two to four weeks before installation, so orders should place by mid-April. Before ordering, consultation needs to happen — another one to two weeks, placing that conversation in early April at the latest.
Early April consultation. Mid-April order. Mid-May installation. Memorial Day on the patio.
That's the minimum timeline for a smooth process. It assumes no delays, no complications, no scheduling conflicts. It assumes dealer availability for consultation, production availability for manufacturing, and installation availability for your preferred dates.
Now add reality. Maybe the first consultation slot isn't until the week after you call. Maybe production runs a few days longer than projected. Maybe the installation team has a conflict with your original date. Each variable adds time.
The homeowner who starts in February builds buffer into every phase. The homeowner who starts in May discovers that buffer doesn't exist — that every day of delay pushes the timeline further past the summer they hoped to enjoy.
Understanding the timeline isn't pessimism. It's planning. It's recognizing that complex projects have complex schedules, and that the best outcomes come from working with those schedules rather than against them.
The Buffer Factor
Things happen.
Weather delays installation days. Manufacturing encounters a materials issue. The dealer's schedule shifts because another project ran long. Your own calendar creates conflicts you didn't anticipate.
None of these problems are anyone's fault. They're just reality — the friction that exists in any complex process involving multiple parties, multiple steps, and multiple variables.
Start early. Build margin. Breathe easy.
The homeowner who starts early absorbs these bumps. A week's delay in manufacturing doesn't matter when there's a month of buffer before the target date. A scheduling conflict with the installation team becomes a minor adjustment rather than a major crisis.
The homeowner who starts late has no margin. Every delay cascades. Every complication becomes critical. The stress level rises with each passing week as the summer that was supposed to be ready slips further away.
Buffer isn't wasted time. Buffer is insurance. It's the difference between a smooth process and a stressful one. Between confident planning and anxious hoping. Between enjoying your summer and surviving your installation timeline.
The Great Defrost creates buffer. Starting in February when you want to be ready in May means eight to twelve weeks of margin. That margin absorbs problems without creating panic. It allows for thoughtful decisions even when unexpected questions arise. It transforms the installation process from a race against the clock into a measured progression toward a clear goal.
Build in the buffer. You'll be grateful you did.
Smart home integration adds another layer — start exploring the options →
The View from the Other Side
The screens are installed. The system works. The first warm day arrives, and you're ready — not because you got lucky, but because you understood the timeline and worked with it.
Every step complete. Every phase handled. Every challenge absorbed by the margin you built.
The consultation happened when dealers had time to give it proper attention. The order placed when manufacturing had capacity to produce it efficiently. The installation scheduled when good slots were available. The buffer absorbed the minor complications that arise in any project.
You're standing on your patio, screens deployed, wondering why anyone does this any other way.
The homeowner next door is just now learning about lead times. They're making calls, leaving voicemails, discovering that "ready by summer" requires more than wanting it to be so. They're about to have the conversation with the dealer that goes "We're booking into August now."
You're hosting.
The installation timeline isn't a secret. The information is available to anyone who looks for it. But looking requires overcoming the assumption that "whenever I'm ready" equals "whenever it can happen." The timeline has its own reality, indifferent to hopes and assumptions.
Understanding that reality — and planning around it — separates the homeowners enjoying their summer from the ones waiting for theirs to start.
The Great Defrost is your opportunity to get on the right side of the timeline. To understand the installation window and work within it rather than against it. To arrive at summer ready instead of hoping.
The countdown has already started. The only question is whether you're counting toward completion or toward realization that you should have started sooner.
Start your timeline today.
