Ozark Trail 13′ x 9′ Blue Roof Screen House each Delivery or Pickup Near Me

I need to replace the center hub (CTRH-02) since this broke while I was using it. The screening and roof are all in excellent condition, along with all the poles, etc. With two more roof poles, I’m sure this could be prevented. ozark trail chairs 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.

I’ve had them for 5 or 6 years and I have no complaints with this company and its products. Browse Ozark Trail’s top-rated hiking and camping gear and more. Find something simple to set up, reliable, durable and with product support. This still has a lot of life left in it and I would love to be able to fix it.

Had I have known that this particular screen house was so hard to find, I would have bought a kit and tried to repair it. If anyone reading this review has any idea where I can purchase another one just like it, please contact me at I have been trying to replace it ever since I lost it in a wind storm.

We put it back in the bag and said this is so stupid. How do you get a tent with no instructions. Hard to set up for one person. It take 2 people at least to set this screen house up.

The winner has 3 days to pick up the item from the appropriate warehouse. Bids can be placed ozark trail chairs via web browser or iOS/Android app. Every item starts at just $1, with no reserve price.

The tent fabric roof provides shade for 46 square feet of the room. The Screen House is spacious enough for six people, or more around a folding table in an uninterrupted 360-degree panoramic shelter. Got this tent as a father’s day gift. Decided to use it to go camping with my fiance and we were going to set up before we went.

This is one of those products where the instructions are basically a complete fantasy. They make one false unstated assumption after another. And even then, they’re not simple. What you wind up with is a web of pipes and plastic pieces that falls apart at one end as you assemble the other. Then the instructions start to get really funny. ‘Insert the leg poles into the hubs to raise the screenhouse frame’ got the first laugh.

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? What about the rain, or the potential for 120-degree heat?

Can someone point me to the person please. I borrowed this screen tent and thought it was a pain to put up…the center hub broke forcing me to duck tape it to keep it together. The new types that go right up without connections are so much better. It was a nice size though and eventually got up with extra tape. This model has been discontinued and I only need two parts to fix it.