🌞 Shade Your World with Style!
This 16' x 16' x 16' triangle sun shade sail is designed to provide exceptional UV protection while enhancing the aesthetic of your outdoor spaces. Made from durable 180GSM high-density polyethylene, it features a breathable design to prevent water pooling and is easy to install with its D-ring corners. With a 3-year warranty and low maintenance requirements, this sunshade is the perfect addition to any backyard, patio, or garden.
S**Y
very durable
This thing survived two severe storms in two consecutive days. We had 60 mph wind gusts and i was more concerned that the mounting hardware would fail instead of the sail. The sail held up like a champ. Definitely buy again.
M**E
Good buy
Neat. Buy it
S**N
The main feature of the deck I built - affordable, replaceable sail shades from amazon
These are the third or fourth replacements. Couple different suppliers - these windscreens4less are in line with the better ones - D rings not rusting, double looped. (prosource Nov 2015 was a single loop). Good for two or three seasons, maybe four depending where you are i guess, winter storage, and how many cats decide they are hammocks. very cute ... until they fall thru an old one, no rip stop material here. Spare one handy. shade that is.Original plan was three 16x16x16 triangle shades out to steel posts placed away from the house in a way to maximise the shade sail coverage while keeping the posts to three, outside of the deck. Two more sails have since been added once the angles were figured and another anchor point added to the house. Triangles bow inward under tension, so the overlapping shades give fuller coverage, even double shade is nice in a few places, and keep it more interesting, especially if you can figure alternating tie off heights. square is just square.Noteworthy Extra Hardware used:3/16" Dacron rope. DavisRopeAndCable dot comStainless Turnbuckles. Sailrite dot comshades replaced, hardware holding strong.all the shade brands seem to provide the same basic white rope for tie offs where direct D ring to metal connectors cannot be made to the anchors. for a quick temporary placement the rope is ok - it is soft and easy to work with ... but will stretch and the shades will flap, shortening their life. if you look closely at the large shade installations at resorts or parks, they use steel cable under high tension. they even have the cable run through all the sides of the shades for extra tension. high quality shades too most likely. thousand$. didn't want fuss with steel cable initially, and ended up never seeing the need.The cheapest closest easiest to work with alternative i could find is Dacron (high strength polyester made by DuPont). US made rope. about 15c per foot for 3/16". it is very low stretch black rope. holds knots well. UV and weathers well. stephen davis at davis rope and cable assembly supplies tower rigging companies, but worked with my little order and walked thru explaining the rope on the phone. order was delayed due to staffing and sickness, extra rope length was thrown in. just because. can't beat that. that was 2017. 2021 I'm about to use him again for zip line rope and car port elevator winching lines.whatever tightness you can get the shades to with the rope, the better ... i've used the cheap white rope as a come-along, several loops back and fro the D ring and anchor, even pulleys, just for fun. whatever, the final tension on the Dacron is best/easiest done with a turnbuckle between the rope and anchor. there are plenty turnbuckles for sale here on amazon ... but mostly galvanised that will rust/seize pretty quickly. found a few stainless ones for $70 or so. each. eek. hence the mention above. around $15 or so, for a strong closed end stainless turnbuckle, with locking nuts. over time a new shade will stretch some; the turnbuckle allows additional tension to pick up the slack - so long as you got enough tension initially with the rope, allowing use of the full turnbuckle length later to pick up slack rather than re tying the rope.hope this helps someone do a shade install a little more robustly - no floppy sails!
M**.
Does not measure 8x8x8
The hardware arrived before the sun shade, I installed it 8' on fascia board and set a post at 8' out into yard. When shade arrived I found it fit on fascia 8' wide, but missed the post by 2', they include a rope with the shade and I used it to bridge the 2' gap. Once stretched it wound up being 8x6x6 triangle.
H**S
Triangular Blue Deck Shade Sail
Sail met my quality expectations with very fast shipping. Well pleased with the entire process and the quality of the sail itself.
R**R
Rope was hard to manage.
Would like to have attaching material included. It was hard to burn the rope ends as it unraveled quickly.
C**S
Wonderful! We have purchased 3 to date.
Weather will eventually require replacement. We are on #2, with a back-up on hand. They last for years, amazing!
J**S
The eye loops rust
I bought the sail last year. It's still in good condition. However the eye loops are completely rusted. They are not stainless steel!!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago