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Motorized Outdoor Shades | Patio Shades with Side Tracks

Most motorized outdoor shades on the market are roller shades — motor in a tube, fabric wraps around it, remote control deploys it. Simple concept. The problem isn't the idea, it's the execution. Cheap motors without obstacle detection. Fabric that's UV-rated for "3 years" which in practice means noticeable degradation by year two. And no track system at all, which means any wind over 10 mph turns your shade into a sail.

Apollo's PowerScreen is a different product category. The fabric doesn't hang free — it's sealed into aluminum side channels that run the full height of the opening. We call it a zip-track system, and if you've been searching for "motorized outdoor shades with side tracks," this is exactly what that phrase means. One button. Shade deploys, locks into the tracks, and your patio becomes a sealed, shaded, private room. Hit the button again and everything disappears into a housing cassette that's barely 4.5 inches tall.

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Here's what happens with a typical motorized roller shade. You find one on Amazon for $300–$500. It shows up, you mount it to your patio header in an hour, and it looks great. The fabric is crisp, the motor is smooth, the remote works from across the yard. Genuinely good product — for about 18 months.

DIY roller shade fabric showing UV degradation after two years of outdoor exposure

Then the edges start fraying where the sun hits hardest. The motor hesitates on the way down because there's no obstacle detection and the mechanism is wearing. A storm comes through and the wind catches the bottom hem — because there's nothing holding it — and now you've got a shade that's half off the roller and you're on a ladder with a YouTube tutorial trying to fix it.

A $300 roller shade works fine on a covered, wind-protected patio for a couple years. That's a real product for a real buyer. But if your patio is exposed, if you deal with any kind of wind, or if you just don't want to be replacing shades every few summers — you're looking at a different product entirely.

This is the part most people haven't seen before. A zip-track shade doesn't just roll down from the top — it rolls down and locks in. The fabric edges have a zipper strip that's impulse-welded to the material. As the shade deploys, that zipper feeds into aluminum side channels — the "tracks" — that run the full height of the opening. The fabric is physically sealed on both sides.

cross-section diagram showing shade fabric sealed in zip-track aluminum side channel

What that means in practice: wind can't get behind the shade. There's no bottom hem flapping. There are no light gaps at the edges. The shade creates a sealed plane from the housing at the top to the weighted bottom bar, locked into tracks on both sides. It's closer to a window than a curtain.

The housing cassette sits at the top of the opening — under 5 inches tall for most sizes. When the shade retracts, the fabric rolls up inside and the cassette covers everything. From the street, there's nothing to see. The tracks are narrow-profile 6063 aluminum that can be color-matched to your patio structure. Most people don't notice them at all.

The motor operates via remote control, wall switch, or smart home integration. Obstacle detection is standard — if something blocks the shade mid-cycle, the motor reverses instead of burning out. That's not a feature you'll find on a $300 Amazon roller.

The fabric is where you make your actual decision. Everything else — the track system, the motor, the housing — is the same across all Apollo shade installations. What changes is the openness percentage, and that determines how much sun, view-through, and privacy you get.

comparison of motorized outdoor shade fabric openness percentages showing view-through and privacy levels

(1%)

1% openness blocks almost everything. Maximum UV protection, near-total privacy from the outside, significant heat reduction. This is what you want on a west-facing patio that gets hammered with afternoon sun, or next to an outdoor kitchen where you're standing at a grill and don't want to cook yourself along with the steaks.

(3%)

3% is what about 60% of our customers choose. Good UV protection, reasonable view-through during the day, and strong daytime privacy — people outside can't see in, but you can see out. It's the balance point. If you're not sure which to pick, this is probably the one.

(5% & 10%)

5% gives you more view-through. Popular on pool enclosures where you want to see the yard while cutting the glare. 10% is mostly decorative — light filtering with minimal privacy. We install 10% occasionally on commercial patios where the restaurant wants ambiance without full sun block.

See full fabric specifications and color options on our PowerScreen product page.

The short answer: anywhere you have a vertical opening you want to close off from sun, wind, or visibility. Covered patios are the most common — that's probably 70% of our shade installations. But we put these on pergolas, lanais, pool cage enclosures, outdoor kitchens, and commercial restaurant patios regularly.

motorized outdoor shades installed

Pergolas are worth calling out specifically because they're where zip-track matters most. A pergola is open to wind on all sides. A free-hanging roller shade on a pergola is basically a kite. The zip-track keeps the fabric locked in the side channels regardless of wind direction — which is why we can install on pergolas that other shade companies won't touch.

Full application gallery and use cases on our PowerScreen page.

If you've been shopping for motorized outdoor shades, you've probably run into three product categories that look similar from a distance but perform very differently. Here's the honest breakdown — and yes, we're biased, but we'll tell you when the other options make sense too.

DIY Roller (SmartWings / Yoolax) Cable-Guided (Insolroll Oasis) Apollo PowerScreen (Zip-Track) Retractable Screen (Genius / Metro)
Price $200–800 DIY $800–1,500 $2,500–4,000+ $2,000–3,500
Installation DIY, 1–2 hours DIY or pro Pro only Pro only
Track System None — free-hanging roller Side cables (optional) Zip-track — fabric sealed in channels Standard track
Wind Performance Flaps in any wind Moderate with cables Wind-rated — sealed edges Moderate
Fabric Warranty 1–3 years 5 years 20 years 3–5 years
Motor Warranty 1–3 years 5 years 7 years 3 years
Max Width ~10–12 ft ~16 ft 20+ ft (linked units) ~20 ft
Obstacle Detection No Some models Yes — all models Some models
Best For Budget, sheltered patios, temporary Mid-range, some wind protection Daily use, wind, permanent Bug/screen use primarily

A $300 SmartWings roller works perfectly on a covered, wind-protected patio for a couple seasons. That's not sarcasm — it's a real product for a real situation. Where it falls apart is exposed patios, any meaningful wind, and the three-year mark when the fabric and motor start showing their age. If you're in that situation, you're not comparing prices anymore — you're comparing product categories.

Apollo's shade system works with Alexa, Google Home, and most smart home platforms. Standard operation is remote control or wall switch. App control is available.

Here's the thing, though — most $300 DIY roller shades also connect to your smart home. Connectivity is not the differentiator. The motor is. Apollo's motors have obstacle detection standard, soft start and stop to reduce fabric wear, and they're rated for daily use over a 20-year lifespan. The DIY motor gets you through 10,000 cycles if you're lucky. Ours is built for that number to be the floor, not the ceiling.

Every Apollo shade is custom-measured and factory-cut to fit your specific opening. This matters more for shades than it does for screens, because with a zip-track system, precision is structural. A quarter-inch gap between the fabric edge and the track defeats the entire purpose — wind gets in, light leaks through, and you've paid $3,000 for a product that performs like a $300 one.

professional installer measuring patio opening for custom motorized outdoor shade

Roller shades use "close enough" sizing because the fabric hangs free anyway — a half-inch either direction doesn't matter. Zip-track requires measurement within 1/16 of an inch. That's why every Apollo installation is done by a factory-trained installer, not dropped on your doorstep in a box.

20-year fabric warranty. 7-year motor warranty. Heavy gauge components and 6063 T6 aluminum throughout — the housing, the tracks, the bottom bar. Impulse-welded zipper retention on the fabric edge. This is not a product built to be replaced in three years.

6063 T6 aluminum zip-track housing and side channel detail on Apollo motorized outdoor shade

For context: most DIY roller shades carry 1–3 year warranties. Cable-guided systems are typically 5 years. The gap isn't because Apollo is being generous — it's because the product is built differently. When you impulse-weld a zipper into marine-grade fabric and run it through extruded aluminum tracks, the failure points that kill cheaper shades simply don't exist.

Full product specifications, fabric data, and warranty details on our PowerScreen page.

Professional-install zip-track systems typically run $2,500–$4,000+ per opening depending on size and fabric. DIY roller shades are $200–$800 but they're a fundamentally different product — no track system, shorter warranties, and not rated for wind. For a detailed breakdown of what drives the cost, see our full motorized shade pricing guide.

For daily use on an exposed patio, yes. A $300 DIY shade that lasts 2–3 years costs more over time than a $3,000 zip-track system that lasts 20+ years. The math works when you factor in replacement costs, wind damage, and the difference between a sealed system that performs every day and a free-hanging roller that needs replacing every few summers.

The track system. Roller shades hang free — fabric drops straight down with nothing holding the edges, which means wind catches them and light leaks around the sides. Zip-track shades seal the fabric into aluminum side channels using an impulse-welded zipper strip. Wind can't get behind them, light can't leak around them. Two completely different products that happen to share a motor.

Side tracks are aluminum channels that run the full height of the shade opening. The fabric edge has a zipper strip that locks into the channel as the shade deploys, sealing the fabric completely. Wind can't get behind it, light can't leak around it. Also called "zip-track." This is what separates professional-install motorized shades from DIY roller shades.

Zip-track shade systems with side channels typically cost $2,500–$4,000+ per opening. The side track mechanism, custom measurements, and professional installation are what drive the cost above DIY alternatives. The 20-year fabric warranty and 7-year motor warranty factor into the long-term value.

Depends on the type. Free-hanging roller shades flap in any wind and should be retracted. Cable-guided shades offer moderate resistance. Apollo's zip-track system locks fabric edges into sealed aluminum channels, so wind can't get behind the shade. Most DIY shades need to be retracted in wind. Zip-track systems don't.

3% is the most popular — good UV block, reasonable view-through, and strong privacy from outside. Choose 1% for maximum sun protection on west-facing patios. 5% works well for pool enclosures where you want to see the yard. 10% is mostly decorative — light filtering with minimal privacy. About 60% of our customers go with 3%.

Yes — pergolas are one of the most common installations. The posts provide mounting points for side tracks and the overhead beam supports the housing cassette. Works on wood, aluminum, or vinyl pergolas. Everything is custom-measured to fit your specific pergola dimensions.

Apollo's zip-track shades carry a 20-year fabric warranty and 7-year motor warranty. The heavy gauge components and 6063 T6 aluminum housing are built for continuous outdoor exposure. The motor is rated for 10,000+ cycles. Compare that to 1–3 year warranties typical of DIY roller shades.

No — different product category. Costco and Amazon sell DIY roller shades with no track system, no obstacle detection, and shorter warranties (1–3 years). Professional-install zip-track shades are custom-measured, sealed in side channels, and backed by 20-year warranties. It's similar to comparing a window AC unit to a central HVAC system.

Yes — compatible with Alexa, Google Home, and most smart home systems. Remote control and app operation are standard. But the real differentiator isn't connectivity — most DIY shades have that too. It's the motor: obstacle detection, soft start and stop, and a design rated for daily use over 20+ years.

Soft brush or sponge with mild soap and water. Never pressure wash — it can damage the fabric and force water into the housing. For the tracks, blow out debris with canned air. The fabric is UV-treated and mold-resistant, so it requires less maintenance than most people expect.

You've been looking at motorized outdoor shades for a while now. You've probably compared prices, read reviews, and wondered whether the difference between a $300 Amazon shade and a $3,000 zip-track system is real or just marketing. It's real. And the easiest way to see it is to talk to a local Apollo dealer who can show you the product in person, measure your space, and give you a quote that's specific to your patio — not a price range from the internet.

Find Your Local Dealer

(855) 530-1246