ONE-TRACK MOTORIZED SCREEN

Why One-Track

ONE-TRACK PROVEN DEPENDABILITY

Engineered For Excellence

One-Track introduced the patented quiet spring technology, the core of our One-Track system, nearly a decade ago.

We’ve crafted the perfect self-adjusting screen system that operates beautifully silently when deployed, ensures frustration-free operation, and can be used in almost any weather condition.

While others have experimented with alternative methods to achieve the advantages of our One-Track screens, none have achieved the unique combination of near-silence, ease of operation, affordability, high reliability, and exceptional dependability.

The real problem with most motorized screens

Most motorized screens fail for predictable reasons. Zippers snag. Cables stretch. Tracks shift. Motors strain.

What starts as a premium upgrade quickly turns into:

Screens that jam or tangle

Gaps that let bugs and wind in

Constant service calls and repairs

You shouldn't have to "babysit" your outdoor upgrade.

That's exactly why One-Track was built differently.

ONE-TRACK THE #1 MOTORIZED INSECT AND SHADE SCREEN

Contact A+ Certified One-Track Screen Dealer Today...

ONE-TRACK MOTORIZED SCREENS

Engineering Features

One-Track self-locking retractable screen track system preventing blowouts in high Florida winds

No blowouts. No rewraps. No frustration.

One-Track 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.

One-Track Keder-edge technology replacing zipper and cable systems on motorized retractable screens

No Zipper. No Cable. Just Simple Deployment

One-Track 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.

One-Track heavy-duty weight bar engineered for maximum screen tension and high wind stability

Heavy Duty

The One-Track 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 —limited flex, no failure.

One-Track reinforced nylon corner system extending motorized retractable screen lifespan durability

Reinforced Corners

One-Track’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.

Headache-free icon for One-Track self-tensioning motorized screen system eliminating 99.9% issues

HEADACHE-FREE

Exclusive self-tensioning system eliminates 99.9% of screen issues. No track adjustments, broken zippers,or dislodged screens.

Lifetime warranty icon for One-Track motorized retractable screens backed by Fenetex engineering

LIFETIME WARRANTY

No other company can stand behind their products like One-Track can because no other company can match our quality.

Custom-made motorized screen icon for One-Track tailor-made color fabric and system options

CUSTOM-MADE SCREENS

Tailor-made screens with vast color, fabric, and system options. Custom paint color and fabric matching are available.

Built to last icon for One-Track marine-grade aluminum UV-protected motorized retractable screens

BUILT TO LAST

We use marine-grade materials such as powder-coated aluminum, UV-protected nylons, stainless steel fasteners, and premium fabrics. Resists corrosion, rust, and screen failure.

Cost-saving icon for One-Track motorized shade screens reducing Florida cooling bills and UV damage

COST-SAVING

Exterior shade screens reduce cooling bills and protect against skin and furniture Damage caused by excessive UV Rays.

Smart controls icon for OneTrack motorized screens with remote phone and home automation integration

SMART CONTROLS

Control One-Track screens via remote and phone or integrate with popular home automation systems for advanced capabilities.

Max corrosion protection icon for One--Track powder-coated aluminum motorized retractable screens

MAX CORROSION PROTECTION

Powder Coated Aluminum Protects your investment from exposure and corrosion.

Heavy-duty design icon for One-Track motorized screens withstanding Florida wind rain and sun

HEAVY-DUTY DESIGN

Our screens are designed to withstand Mother Nature's daily abuse. High wind, rain, or shine, dust dirt, dander, it doesn't matter. One-Track covers it all.

ONE-TRACK THE #1 MOTORIZED INSECT AND SHADE SCREEN

Contact A+ Certified One-Track Screen Dealer Today...

ONE-TRACK

Ready For Life's Storms

LOCK TIGHT - KEDER TECHNOLOGY

Good bye Zipper Track System

When others relied on outdated zipper systems, One-Track pioneered a breakthrough. Our Lock Tight Keder technology transformed the industry by delivering what zippers couldn't: unmatched strength, flawless operation, and built-to-last reliability.

Years of proven performance speak for themselves. Lock Tight Keder provides superior wind resistance, effortless functionality, and the durability you need for long-term peace of mind.

  • Lock Tight Side Retention

  • Prevent Screen Hangups

  • Prevent Jams

  • Prevent Snaggs

  • Prevent Rewraps

ONE-TRACK THE #1 MOTORIZED MOTORIZED INSECT AND SHADE SCREEN

Contact A+ Certified One-Track Screen Dealer Today...

THE ONE-TRACK DIFFERENCE

Eliminates All Services Call, Fix Track and Zippers Systems

One-Track reinforced toughened nylon corner component extending motorized screen lifespan durability

Recognizing that screen wear is most prominent at the corner where the weight bar and screen meet, One-Track engineers designed a robust and flexible guide made of toughened nylon. This innovative design reinforces the corner connection, extending the screen's lifespan,


.

One-Track low-profile standard weight bar for motorized retractable screens in low-wind Florida areas

One-Track offers a well-engineered, low-profile standard weight bar suitable for installations in low-wind areas. When rolled up, it minimizes visibility in storage. For locations with higher wind exposure, a heavier-weight bar can be specified as needed.

.

One-Track Keder retainer component replacing zipper systems on motorized retractable screens Florida

One-Track as the first to employ keder-edged screens, opted against zippers, known for potential issues. Keder's smooth, durable design avoids past failures.


.

One-Track pre-feeder no blow-out track system keeping motorized screens locked during Florida storms

One-Track retractable screens are designed to never come out of their tracks. The screen pre-feeder facilitates a smooth transition from the reel to the side track. Smart motors instantly halt the downward motion of the screen, preventing it from dislodging from the tracks.


.

One-Track quiet spring tensioning technology for near-silent motorized retractable screen operation

One-Track employs a unique spring-based tensioning system that ensures nearly silent operation of the screens. This technology prioritizes a quiet and comfortable outdoor experience. Think of it like shock absorbers in a car - It's the springs that give you a quiet, comfortable ride.


.

ONE-TRACK THE #1 MOTORIZED INSECT AND SHADE SCREENS

Contact A+ Certified One-Track Screen Dealer Today...

THE ONE-TRACK DIFFERENCE

One-Track Screen

AMERICAN INGENUITY

Made in the USA.

Proudly Made in the USA—every One-Track 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.

Couple enjoying wine on a screened porch at sunset with motorized screens deployed, overlooking coastal marsh and waterfront views

THE EVENINGS "The Dusk Surrender"

April 30, 20268 min read

There's an hour at the end of every Southern day that belongs to someone else.

The sun dips toward the horizon. The brutal heat that made afternoon unbearable finally breaks. The light turns golden, then amber, then that particular shade of rose that photographers wait all day to capture. The birds begin their evening chorus. The water catches colors that make you stop whatever you're doing and just look.

And the mosquitoes come alive.

Every evening, right on schedule, you lose the best hour of the day.

The magic hour. The golden hour. The hour when the light is perfect, the temperature is perfect, everything about outside is finally perfect — and you can't be there. Because the moment the sun angles low enough to make the world beautiful, the bugs arrive to claim it.

You try to stay. You always try. Five minutes of swatting becomes ten becomes an admission of defeat. The screen door closes behind you. Through the glass, you watch the sunset you should be experiencing. Inside, where the air conditioning hums and the walls keep the beauty at a distance.

The dusk surrender. Every evening, every summer, every year. The best hour of the day handed over to insects that have no capacity to appreciate what they've stolen.

Bug season is coming. The question isn't whether you'll lose another summer's worth of evenings — it's whether this is the year you take them back.

The Golden Hour, Stolen

Scientists have a name for what mosquitoes do at dusk: crepuscular activity. It sounds clinical enough to mask the robbery it describes.

Mosquito feeding peaks during the hours around sunrise and sunset. The temperature, the humidity, the light levels — everything aligns to make twilight optimal for the insects that need your blood. Evolution spent millions of years perfecting their timing. You can't negotiate with it.

The result is a daily theft so predictable you've stopped thinking of it as loss.

Five o'clock arrives. The day's heat begins to fade. The light softens into something magical. And somewhere in the back of your mind, the calculation begins: How long before I have to go inside? How many bites am I willing to accept before retreating? What's the exit strategy?

You shouldn't need an exit strategy for your own backyard.

The porch you built for evenings sits empty during evenings. The deck with the sunset view — that expensive deck, positioned precisely to catch the light you wanted to watch — becomes unusable precisely when the light arrives. The investment you made in outdoor living generates returns only during the hours when outdoor living is least appealing.

Morning coffee on the patio: manageable. Midday lunch in the shade: tolerable. But evenings? Evenings belong to the mosquitoes.

You adjust. You adapt. You move dinner earlier to beat the bugs. You watch sunsets through windows instead of from the porch. You accept the dusk surrender the way you accept traffic and taxes — inevitable, frustrating, permanent.

Except it isn't permanent. The surrender is voluntary. You just didn't know you had another option.

Homeowners across the South are reclaiming their evenings. See how →

The Hours You're Missing

Consider what evening means.

It's when the workday finally ends and the living begins. It's when families gather and conversations deepen and connections form. It's when the drink in your hand transitions from coffee to wine, and the tasks of the day give way to the pleasures of the night.

Evening is when we become ourselves again.

In the South, those hours are stolen. The timing that makes them precious — the temperature drop, the softening light, the natural transition from doing to being — coincides exactly with the timing that makes them impossible.

What have you missed?

The sunsets you should have watched with someone you love. The conversations that needed more time than the bugs allowed. The peaceful hours after dinner that could have been something instead of nothing.

The dinners you ate inside because outside was too hostile. The conversations you had through windows instead of on the porch.

You moved to the waterway for the view. You built the deck for the evenings. You invested in outdoor living because outdoor living is why people live in the South.

And then you gave most of it away. Not by choice — by default. By accepting the terms the mosquitoes set.

The hours you're missing aren't marginal hours. They're the best hours. The hours when the world is most beautiful. The hours when being outside matters most.

Every evening, you're being robbed of something you can't replace.

One-Track screens give you back the hours the bugs have stolen.

Taking Back Twilight

The solution isn't complicated. It's just screens.

Not the decorative screens that provide ambiance without protection. Not the partial screens that leave gaps for mosquitoes to exploit. Complete screening — motorized, sealed, engineered to create an enclosure where bugs cannot enter and evenings cannot be stolen.

The screens descend as the sun descends. Inside the protected zone, the golden hour unfolds the way it should.

The light changes. You watch it happen. The colors deepen through the mesh — amber to rose to purple to the blue twilight that comes after sunset. The birds continue their chorus. The water catches the last reflections. And you're there. Present. Unharassed. Experiencing the hours that have been stolen from you for years.

No swatting. No time limit. No calculation of acceptable bites versus escape timing. Just an evening, unfolding at its own pace, with you in the middle of it instead of watching from inside.

The screens are almost invisible. The protection is almost total. The hours are yours.

Twilight reclaimed doesn't feel like technology. It feels like freedom — the freedom to exist in the best part of the day without negotiating with insects for permission.

Motorized screens deploy in seconds — as easily as turning on a light.

Evenings Extended

Picture what changes.

Dinner happens on the porch. Not rushed, not abbreviated, not constantly interrupted by swatting and complaints. Just dinner — the way you imagined it when you built the porch, when you positioned the table, when you pictured the gatherings that would happen there.

The conversation that follows dinner extends past twilight into darkness. The citronella candles you used to rely on become atmosphere rather than failed defense. The drinks get refilled. The stories get longer. Nobody's watching the clock for bug-escape timing because there's nothing to escape.

The children play outside past sunset without returning covered in welts. The dog doesn't retreat to the door with his tail between his legs. The evening stretches the way evenings are supposed to stretch — lazy, unhurried, allowed to be whatever they want to be.

The investment you made in outdoor living finally delivers its promised returns. The space you designed for evenings finally hosts them.

Weeks accumulate into months. The summer that used to mean daily surrender becomes something else: a season of actually living outside, of experiencing the climate you moved here for, of finally getting what you paid for when you bought the waterway house with the sunset view.

One-Track changes the calculation. Not slightly — completely. The evening belongs to you.

See what reclaimed evenings look like in homes across the South →

Smart Control, Seamless Living

The best technology disappears into the life it enables.

One-Track screens can deploy automatically as sunset approaches — no button to press, no reminder needed. The system knows when evening arrives and responds accordingly, protecting your space before you even think about needing protection.

Or deploy with voice command while your hands hold drinks and your eyes watch the sunset. "Lower the screens" and the barrier descends. No app to open. No interface to navigate. Just words and result.

Or program a schedule: screens down at 6 PM, screens up at 9 PM, every day through bug season. Set it once and live inside the protection without ever managing it.

The evening happens. The screens handle themselves. You remain exactly where you should be: present.

With smart home integration, screens respond to your schedule, your voice, or the sunset itself.

Before the Season

The evenings you're about to lose are coming soon.

Bug season doesn't negotiate schedules. It arrives when it arrives, and the hours you could have spent on the porch slip away one sunset at a time. Another summer of watching through windows. Another season of indoor dinners. Another year of the dusk surrender.

Unless this is the year something changes.

Installation before bug season means screens ready when the bugs arrive. It means the first evening of the season spent outside instead of inside, watching the sunset you should be watching, present for the hours you should be present for.

Another summer of the dusk surrender — or the first summer of taking it back.

The time to prepare isn't when mosquitoes are already driving you inside. It's now. While the off-season makes scheduling easier. While you have time to make decisions instead of reacting to swarms. While the evenings you're about to lose are still something you can protect.

Bug season is coming. Your evenings don't have to surrender to it.

The golden hour belongs to you.

Find a dealer near you →


mosquito seasonduskporch screensoutdoor diningevening entertainingsunsettwilightgolden hourscreened porch for evening useevening outdoor living bug protectionsunset watching without mosquitoesuse porch at dusk bugshow to enjoy evening patio without mosquitoes
blog author image

Kip Hudakoz

Khudakoz is an industry contributor for One-Track Motorized Screens and Oculus Intel, with over two decades in the outdoor service industry. His work covers patio construction, outdoor living installation, and the design challenges homeowners face from one season to the next. He focuses on cutting through marketing claims to help consumers make informed decisions about complex outdoor investments. A Rollins College graduate and former United States Marine, Khudakoz currently co-hosts the Florida Home and Garden Radio show, where he answers listener questions about outdoor living, weather protection, and home improvement decisions. His perspective combines field-tested experience with an educator's instinct for translating technical complexity into language homeowners can act on.

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Couple enjoying wine on a screened porch at sunset with motorized screens deployed, overlooking coastal marsh and waterfront views

THE EVENINGS "The Dusk Surrender"

April 30, 20268 min read

There's an hour at the end of every Southern day that belongs to someone else.

The sun dips toward the horizon. The brutal heat that made afternoon unbearable finally breaks. The light turns golden, then amber, then that particular shade of rose that photographers wait all day to capture. The birds begin their evening chorus. The water catches colors that make you stop whatever you're doing and just look.

And the mosquitoes come alive.

Every evening, right on schedule, you lose the best hour of the day.

The magic hour. The golden hour. The hour when the light is perfect, the temperature is perfect, everything about outside is finally perfect — and you can't be there. Because the moment the sun angles low enough to make the world beautiful, the bugs arrive to claim it.

You try to stay. You always try. Five minutes of swatting becomes ten becomes an admission of defeat. The screen door closes behind you. Through the glass, you watch the sunset you should be experiencing. Inside, where the air conditioning hums and the walls keep the beauty at a distance.

The dusk surrender. Every evening, every summer, every year. The best hour of the day handed over to insects that have no capacity to appreciate what they've stolen.

Bug season is coming. The question isn't whether you'll lose another summer's worth of evenings — it's whether this is the year you take them back.

The Golden Hour, Stolen

Scientists have a name for what mosquitoes do at dusk: crepuscular activity. It sounds clinical enough to mask the robbery it describes.

Mosquito feeding peaks during the hours around sunrise and sunset. The temperature, the humidity, the light levels — everything aligns to make twilight optimal for the insects that need your blood. Evolution spent millions of years perfecting their timing. You can't negotiate with it.

The result is a daily theft so predictable you've stopped thinking of it as loss.

Five o'clock arrives. The day's heat begins to fade. The light softens into something magical. And somewhere in the back of your mind, the calculation begins: How long before I have to go inside? How many bites am I willing to accept before retreating? What's the exit strategy?

You shouldn't need an exit strategy for your own backyard.

The porch you built for evenings sits empty during evenings. The deck with the sunset view — that expensive deck, positioned precisely to catch the light you wanted to watch — becomes unusable precisely when the light arrives. The investment you made in outdoor living generates returns only during the hours when outdoor living is least appealing.

Morning coffee on the patio: manageable. Midday lunch in the shade: tolerable. But evenings? Evenings belong to the mosquitoes.

You adjust. You adapt. You move dinner earlier to beat the bugs. You watch sunsets through windows instead of from the porch. You accept the dusk surrender the way you accept traffic and taxes — inevitable, frustrating, permanent.

Except it isn't permanent. The surrender is voluntary. You just didn't know you had another option.

Homeowners across the South are reclaiming their evenings. See how →

The Hours You're Missing

Consider what evening means.

It's when the workday finally ends and the living begins. It's when families gather and conversations deepen and connections form. It's when the drink in your hand transitions from coffee to wine, and the tasks of the day give way to the pleasures of the night.

Evening is when we become ourselves again.

In the South, those hours are stolen. The timing that makes them precious — the temperature drop, the softening light, the natural transition from doing to being — coincides exactly with the timing that makes them impossible.

What have you missed?

The sunsets you should have watched with someone you love. The conversations that needed more time than the bugs allowed. The peaceful hours after dinner that could have been something instead of nothing.

The dinners you ate inside because outside was too hostile. The conversations you had through windows instead of on the porch.

You moved to the waterway for the view. You built the deck for the evenings. You invested in outdoor living because outdoor living is why people live in the South.

And then you gave most of it away. Not by choice — by default. By accepting the terms the mosquitoes set.

The hours you're missing aren't marginal hours. They're the best hours. The hours when the world is most beautiful. The hours when being outside matters most.

Every evening, you're being robbed of something you can't replace.

One-Track screens give you back the hours the bugs have stolen.

Taking Back Twilight

The solution isn't complicated. It's just screens.

Not the decorative screens that provide ambiance without protection. Not the partial screens that leave gaps for mosquitoes to exploit. Complete screening — motorized, sealed, engineered to create an enclosure where bugs cannot enter and evenings cannot be stolen.

The screens descend as the sun descends. Inside the protected zone, the golden hour unfolds the way it should.

The light changes. You watch it happen. The colors deepen through the mesh — amber to rose to purple to the blue twilight that comes after sunset. The birds continue their chorus. The water catches the last reflections. And you're there. Present. Unharassed. Experiencing the hours that have been stolen from you for years.

No swatting. No time limit. No calculation of acceptable bites versus escape timing. Just an evening, unfolding at its own pace, with you in the middle of it instead of watching from inside.

The screens are almost invisible. The protection is almost total. The hours are yours.

Twilight reclaimed doesn't feel like technology. It feels like freedom — the freedom to exist in the best part of the day without negotiating with insects for permission.

Motorized screens deploy in seconds — as easily as turning on a light.

Evenings Extended

Picture what changes.

Dinner happens on the porch. Not rushed, not abbreviated, not constantly interrupted by swatting and complaints. Just dinner — the way you imagined it when you built the porch, when you positioned the table, when you pictured the gatherings that would happen there.

The conversation that follows dinner extends past twilight into darkness. The citronella candles you used to rely on become atmosphere rather than failed defense. The drinks get refilled. The stories get longer. Nobody's watching the clock for bug-escape timing because there's nothing to escape.

The children play outside past sunset without returning covered in welts. The dog doesn't retreat to the door with his tail between his legs. The evening stretches the way evenings are supposed to stretch — lazy, unhurried, allowed to be whatever they want to be.

The investment you made in outdoor living finally delivers its promised returns. The space you designed for evenings finally hosts them.

Weeks accumulate into months. The summer that used to mean daily surrender becomes something else: a season of actually living outside, of experiencing the climate you moved here for, of finally getting what you paid for when you bought the waterway house with the sunset view.

One-Track changes the calculation. Not slightly — completely. The evening belongs to you.

See what reclaimed evenings look like in homes across the South →

Smart Control, Seamless Living

The best technology disappears into the life it enables.

One-Track screens can deploy automatically as sunset approaches — no button to press, no reminder needed. The system knows when evening arrives and responds accordingly, protecting your space before you even think about needing protection.

Or deploy with voice command while your hands hold drinks and your eyes watch the sunset. "Lower the screens" and the barrier descends. No app to open. No interface to navigate. Just words and result.

Or program a schedule: screens down at 6 PM, screens up at 9 PM, every day through bug season. Set it once and live inside the protection without ever managing it.

The evening happens. The screens handle themselves. You remain exactly where you should be: present.

With smart home integration, screens respond to your schedule, your voice, or the sunset itself.

Before the Season

The evenings you're about to lose are coming soon.

Bug season doesn't negotiate schedules. It arrives when it arrives, and the hours you could have spent on the porch slip away one sunset at a time. Another summer of watching through windows. Another season of indoor dinners. Another year of the dusk surrender.

Unless this is the year something changes.

Installation before bug season means screens ready when the bugs arrive. It means the first evening of the season spent outside instead of inside, watching the sunset you should be watching, present for the hours you should be present for.

Another summer of the dusk surrender — or the first summer of taking it back.

The time to prepare isn't when mosquitoes are already driving you inside. It's now. While the off-season makes scheduling easier. While you have time to make decisions instead of reacting to swarms. While the evenings you're about to lose are still something you can protect.

Bug season is coming. Your evenings don't have to surrender to it.

The golden hour belongs to you.

Find a dealer near you →


mosquito seasonduskporch screensoutdoor diningevening entertainingsunsettwilightgolden hourscreened porch for evening useevening outdoor living bug protectionsunset watching without mosquitoesuse porch at dusk bugshow to enjoy evening patio without mosquitoes
blog author image

Kip Hudakoz

Khudakoz is an industry contributor for One-Track Motorized Screens and Oculus Intel, with over two decades in the outdoor service industry. His work covers patio construction, outdoor living installation, and the design challenges homeowners face from one season to the next. He focuses on cutting through marketing claims to help consumers make informed decisions about complex outdoor investments. A Rollins College graduate and former United States Marine, Khudakoz currently co-hosts the Florida Home and Garden Radio show, where he answers listener questions about outdoor living, weather protection, and home improvement decisions. His perspective combines field-tested experience with an educator's instinct for translating technical complexity into language homeowners can act on.

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