Curtain Track Connector 90 Degree U Type Heavy-duty Rails Joints
Brand | Bikykose |
Color | Accessories |
Product Dimensions | 8.6"L x 5.5"W |
Material | Metal |
Mounting Type | Ceiling Mounted |
Item Weight | 0.16 Kilograms |
Manufacturer | Bikykose |
Item Weight | 5.6 ounces |
Size | 90° Angleturn 1pc |
Style | Track Connector |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
H**E
easily mounting
good price.
K**A
Very nice
Easy install and came with all necessary accessories.
A**E
Easy to use work great
Easy to use, great selection of different hanging hardware.Rollers slide smoothly.
D**E
The item is great, I need another on
It was easy to install
L**A
Needs more sliders than what's included. Expensive for what it is.
Wouldve given a higher rating, but had to spend more money to get enough sliders for the curtains I want to hang. It came with only 25 sliders and across 8' that isnt near enough for a smooth look. Other than that it wasn't hard to put together or to put up.It will do the job, but shouldve been much less expensive.
W**G
This track system is simply brilliant! Solves a problem I've had for years
I can't rave enough about this Bikykose Curtain Track system. I had a particularly annoying issue with some drapes in my house. In the great room there is a wall of windows that have a screen that lowers in front of from a valence for a video projection system. Originally the drapes were on a motorized track that crapped out. I then replace it with a traditional traverse type rod. Well that has been a disaster for years. The plastic clips kept jamming, making it a huge problem to open the curtains to lower the screen. This Bikykose system is very lightweight and narrow, making it easy to fit it in a very cramped space. I screwed up and didn't get enough of the track rollers. But they is completely my fault - I just didn't count the number of hooks at the top of the curtain correctly. I ordered more so no issue!. It went together super quick and the rail, once assembled just clicks in to the brackets. It really is simple. But the brilliant part is how smooth and easy it is to open and close the drapes. And because the track is so slim, I can even now lower the projection screen behind the drapes even when they are closed. This really is terrific!. We haven't used the projector for several years now because opening and closing the drapes was a huge hassle. This track system makes it effortless - and they are heavy 120" long, room darkening drapes. GREAT ITEM!!!
P**R
EASY TO CUSTOM CONFIGURE AND INSTALL, FEELS STURDY, HOPING CLIPS HOLD!
After wrestling with my outdoor patio curtains via several means of hanging devices, I finally decided to make the switch to a more permanent solution than PVC and zip ties. Went WAY upscale by upgrading to this track system, which I expect should provide more flexibility in adjusting curtains for the movement of the sun as well as making removal for cleaning super, super easy!ASSEMBLY:Lucky me - three tracks connected fit perfectly to my space, so no hack-sawing needed. I'd gotten the larger length with consideration of doing an L-curve on each corner, but for now, I'll be happy to just have a straight install (the sun just went from "winter warmth" to "broil" 'round these parts).Super easy to piece together with my handy-dandy ratcheting screwdriver and the supplied connectors.Remembered to install the track rollers/hooks BEFORE I installed the endcaps (it must have been a stellar brain day for me - usually I try to do everything backwards without even trying).Hopped up on the ladder to install the <ceiling mount brackets> on existing L brackets that have been attached to the house via stud since approximately... 13 paint jobs ago. Used some stainless steel bolts with nuts and washers, because that seemed like the quickest mode, and I had the hardware chest right there already.The brackets (both ceiling and walk) have a shifting lever of sorts that's plastic. Pull back the lever and insert the track with a lip, then release the lever, which holds the track in place via tension on the lip. This is my only point of concern with the construction here, as everything else is aluminum where it's important. Need those plastic levers to hold up (outside, covered from the elements and out of the sun, but in an arid climate). To be fair, it will be just as dry in the house as it is outside, but hopefully not as warm.FOUR HANDS HANDY TO INSTALL TRACK TO BRACKETS, BUT TWO HANDS AND SOME BUNGIEES WILL DO IT, TOO-Yeah, def would have helped to have a helper, but who else feels the urge for "patio drapes NOW!"? Good to know I have company. Anyway, I didn't want to torque the connected brackets too much, so I looped two bungees around my L brackets at either end to support the track and then proceeded to attach to the brackets one at a time without having 12 feet of track waggling around at right angles.EASY ATTACHMENT OF DRAPES -I had some head space available, and it doesn't bother me at all to see the mechanics on my side, so I did the laziest install possible by hooking the track hooks to the curtain hooks I'd put on my outdoor drapes (after removing from the PVC and giving them a good wash - jeez, is this the dust capital of the world? No, we're not in Texas). Yeah, it took a little time to install the hooks, and will again when it's time to wash, but I get to do all that on ground level and not over my head while dodging porch obstacles and worrying about a little dog that has no qualms about walking under a ladder. As if she hasn't had enough bad luck already!That head space will also provide some prime gecko-UFC action in the summer, too, as the geckos have taken over for the daddy long-legs in controlling the rest of the bug/spider populations. Honestly, I think I must have a bit of a gecko overpopulation problem, or else these are just not congenial geckos, because they bicker fight, and battle like my backwoods cousins back home. Not sure what's going on there. The front porch geckos get along just fine, but it's pure Succession on the back porch.SWOOSH!It's that easy now to open and close the porch drapes. So easy, you'll do it until someone else around you gets seriously, seriously annoyed. Swoosh-swoosh-swoosh. Oh, don't make me go back out there to do it again! Kinda fun.With a west-facing patio, and a slider door, my thermal outdoor curtains will SERIOUSLY cut down on transfer of heat into the house, plus it will keep the porch much more pleasant all summer, especially if we can keep the concrete slab from heating up every day and storing heat through the night.FUTURE PLANS-I'm working on a design to run some muslin drapery across open spaces, then use a mister to occasionally mist them for evaporative cooling on dry days. That will drop the temp on the patio a few degrees as well. If I succeed, will share, for sure. Might use my two extra tracks to do a limited run of muslin (will need a catch basin for those anyway, so they can't be in the walk-through area.Sometime in July when it's absolutely unbearable out, maybe I'll also figure out how to hook up a little motor on a timer to automatically close the drapes before time for the sun-broil. I hate giving up my view, but it gets so crazy hot here. Yes, I'll keep the motor away from the collection basin for the cooling device (or ground it really well? or both?)OVERALL -If I'd known how well these worked, I would have ditched all the curtain rods in the house for this kind of track a long time ago. I mean, I've been hospitalized, I know how easy it is for the nurse to swoosh that curtain before you show too much of yourself in a hospital gown, but I guess I assumed that was some kind of special hospital-grade curtain that had German ball bearings? Or something kind of exclusive?It isn't - you can have hospital-grade swoosh for not much money at all.This is such a win. Life is hard. Drapery shouldn't present additional difficulties in your life, y'all! Get some swoosh!
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