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Discover how these innovative solutions can transform your outdoor living area into a luxurious oasis. Whether you're dreaming of a stylish pergola, the convenience of motorized screens, looking for a little shade, or the elegance of high-end custom fencing, we’ve got you covered.
Look, I've been on a lot of jobs. Some great, some forgettable, and a few that made me stop mid-step and go: "Are you kidding me right now?"
This isn't a hit piece. It's not about calling people out. But if we don't talk about the dumb stuff that actually happens out there, you might end up being the next crash test dummy in someone else's motorized screen experiment.
So here they are — five of the absolute dumbest things we've run into while serving motorized screens installed by another company. Stuff we still shake our heads about.
No, you didn't read that wrong. I've pulled housings off walls that were being held up with plastic drywall anchors — the kind you'd find in a $3.99 kit from the hardware store.
I asked the customer, "Did anyone talk to you about wind ratings and fastener schedules?"
She just blinked and said, "They told me it would hold."
Let's just say this: it's Florida. If your installer isn't using concrete anchors, lag bolts, or similar hardware designed for attaching the screen's framework to the dwelling unit, they're taking a gamble with your house.
Best advice: If the concrete anchors are not stainless steel, run..
We once showed up to service a screen that kept jamming. It didn't take long to see why: the side track had been installed across a huge stucco crack — like a bridge over a sinkhole.
No grinding, no prep. Just slapped up the track.. Screwed it in. Called it done.
The screen couldn't close straight to save its life. And that's not even counting the moisture that was already creeping in.
This one still makes me laugh — and cringe.
New guy on the crew grabs the remote and hits the down arrow. The screen starts dropping. Cool. But it doesn't stop. It just… keeps going past the end, into the deck, motor's still spinning, until it reverses and wraps the screen, jamming the weightbar in the housing.
No one set the limits.
Screen gets twisted, fabric tears, motor strains. What should've been a clean 60-second check turned into a costly repair.
Best Advice: Set your limits. Then test, always in that order.
This one's my favorite.
Customer walks outside and says, "Hey... where's Charlie's door?"
The installer looks at her blankly. "Who's Charlie?"
That's when the German Shepherd barks from behind the screen; he can't get through anymore. Then the customer called us.
Moral of the story? Screens shouldn't block how you live. If the person installing it isn't asking about the space, your routines, or your pets… they're not installing it for you — just trying to make a buck.
We picked up a job last year where a company installed four motorized screens on a patio that faced open water. Gorgeous view. But brutal wind.
The original installers never warned the customer about retracting the screens in storms. Never checked exposure. Never reinforced the tracks.
Screens blew out in less than six months or were ripped off the wall. The product wasn't the problem. The install was.
Your lanai isn't a showroom. It's a battlefield. It needs to be treated like one.
Sponsor by MagnaTrack Motorized Screens:
We've been doing this a long time. And every time someone cuts corners, the patio reminds us. Usually the hard way.
At Florida Living Outdoor, we believe in testing everything before it fails. We understand that over-engineering achieves long-lasting results. Because when you're the crash test dummy, failure gets expensive.
And personal.
So if you're thinking about motorized screens, do one thing:
Ask better questions.
Not about the brand — ask about the install. Ask what they'll do when something isn't square. Ask how they anchor. Ask if they've got photos of past jobs. Ask how they'll clean up. Ask what happens if the wind blows hard the day after install, because even the best product installed poorly results in a crapy experience.
And if you want the team that understands (and learns from other people's failures) — Florida Living Outdoor is here to ensure the best possible results.
Look, I've been on a lot of jobs. Some great, some forgettable, and a few that made me stop mid-step and go: "Are you kidding me right now?"
This isn't a hit piece. It's not about calling people out. But if we don't talk about the dumb stuff that actually happens out there, you might end up being the next crash test dummy in someone else's motorized screen experiment.
So here they are — five of the absolute dumbest things we've run into while serving motorized screens installed by another company. Stuff we still shake our heads about.
No, you didn't read that wrong. I've pulled housings off walls that were being held up with plastic drywall anchors — the kind you'd find in a $3.99 kit from the hardware store.
I asked the customer, "Did anyone talk to you about wind ratings and fastener schedules?"
She just blinked and said, "They told me it would hold."
Let's just say this: it's Florida. If your installer isn't using concrete anchors, lag bolts, or similar hardware designed for attaching the screen's framework to the dwelling unit, they're taking a gamble with your house.
Best advice: If the concrete anchors are not stainless steel, run..
We once showed up to service a screen that kept jamming. It didn't take long to see why: the side track had been installed across a huge stucco crack — like a bridge over a sinkhole.
No grinding, no prep. Just slapped up the track.. Screwed it in. Called it done.
The screen couldn't close straight to save its life. And that's not even counting the moisture that was already creeping in.
This one still makes me laugh — and cringe.
New guy on the crew grabs the remote and hits the down arrow. The screen starts dropping. Cool. But it doesn't stop. It just… keeps going past the end, into the deck, motor's still spinning, until it reverses and wraps the screen, jamming the weightbar in the housing.
No one set the limits.
Screen gets twisted, fabric tears, motor strains. What should've been a clean 60-second check turned into a costly repair.
Best Advice: Set your limits. Then test, always in that order.
This one's my favorite.
Customer walks outside and says, "Hey... where's Charlie's door?"
The installer looks at her blankly. "Who's Charlie?"
That's when the German Shepherd barks from behind the screen; he can't get through anymore. Then the customer called us.
Moral of the story? Screens shouldn't block how you live. If the person installing it isn't asking about the space, your routines, or your pets… they're not installing it for you — just trying to make a buck.
We picked up a job last year where a company installed four motorized screens on a patio that faced open water. Gorgeous view. But brutal wind.
The original installers never warned the customer about retracting the screens in storms. Never checked exposure. Never reinforced the tracks.
Screens blew out in less than six months or were ripped off the wall. The product wasn't the problem. The install was.
Your lanai isn't a showroom. It's a battlefield. It needs to be treated like one.
Sponsor by MagnaTrack Motorized Screens:
We've been doing this a long time. And every time someone cuts corners, the patio reminds us. Usually the hard way.
At Florida Living Outdoor, we believe in testing everything before it fails. We understand that over-engineering achieves long-lasting results. Because when you're the crash test dummy, failure gets expensive.
And personal.
So if you're thinking about motorized screens, do one thing:
Ask better questions.
Not about the brand — ask about the install. Ask what they'll do when something isn't square. Ask how they anchor. Ask if they've got photos of past jobs. Ask how they'll clean up. Ask what happens if the wind blows hard the day after install, because even the best product installed poorly results in a crapy experience.
And if you want the team that understands (and learns from other people's failures) — Florida Living Outdoor is here to ensure the best possible results.
Work requiring DBPR licensure in partnership with CGC1532839
Deerfield Beach
Light House Point
Plantation
South West Ranches
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