Ozark Trail Screen House Reviews

After setting it up, it seems to me folks just don’t know how to exercise a little common sense and patience. The overall construction is about what you expect for the price. Browse Ozark Trail’s top-rated hiking and camping gear and more. My experience with Ozark Trail equipment has been to reinforce the old adage “you get what you pay for”. I highly recommend that anyone looking for a good screen house spend the additional money and get a Swiss Gear. Don’t try to save a few dollars and end up with a POS like this one.

The rest of the process was funny too, with wimpy frizzy guylines, and inexplicable bits of plastic that are supposed to tighten them. I had to use every knot I’ve learned from rock climbing. There’s shade, and fewer bugs than outside ozark trail canopy the screenhouse. I do have some reservations left, though. I wonder what will happen when the wind comes. Will I come home and just find the screenhouse gone, or will I see it blowing around in the street, trailing pipe segments?

I have lost the instructions and the list of parts to the Screen House. I was wondering if anyone can email me the instructions and List of parts. I would appreciate any help I can get. ozark trail screen house Anyone have spare parts for sale? I need to replace the center hub (CTRH-02) since this broke while I was using it. Bring the whole thing down when the winds are +20 miles per hour.

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I have large screen house and I love it. It gets used very hard every summer.

Setting up the screenhouse you need an army of people to hold the frame in place to put the screen over. Then the hooks don’t even reach the holes at the bottom of the poles. Then if you can manage to get that far, you have to run like ozark trail canopy crazy to get it tied down before if falls over. Bottom of screen doesn’t even tough the ground. This tent is only $47 at Walmart, however that is not the point. The hubs on the tent and the construction of the design are worthless.

ozark trail screen house

The “frame” barely stayed together on the ground. Any attempt to lift a corner and insert a leg pole resulted in pipes flying everywhere. I thought of resorting to duct tape, but since I had none handy, with great finesse I managed to lift each corner one pipe segment at a time.

Well I’m a camper and I intend to use this weekly. We have a love-hate relationship with this screen tent. But, the slightest wind or rain and the whole thing comes down because of flimsy roof design. After multiple storms/fall downs, the screen portion has suffered some massive wounds.