Magne Shades

The windscreen on a motorhome is a big hunk of glass, which is great for driving down the road, and sometimes nice for views from a campsite, but when the front of the coach faces into the sun, it can be like a greenhouse, significantly heating up the coach.

Many people solve this by adding some sort of shade to cut down the glare; from something basic like a reflective shade inside like you might put in a car, to something that attaches to the outside, often made of fabric that lets one see out but nobody can see in.

A popular brand of shade is Magne Shade, which uses window-mounted magnets to easily and securely attach the shade.

They can even have custom printing on the shades, to add more personality. Since our domicile is in Oregon, and we used to live in the foothills of Mount Hood near Portland, and we thought a reddish image would suit our coach, we chose a royalty-free image of the mountain reflected in Trillium Lake at sunset, cropping it to center the mountain in the image.

The manufacturer provided a rendering of how it would look:

Rendering

Manufacturing took several weeks, then we received the shades:

Wrapped shades

Unrolling

We installed the shades ourselves. One of the first steps was to arrange the shade on the windshield, temporarily attaching the magnets on the inside. My ladder was very useful (and one of the reasons for buying it):

David arranging shade

Shade

Then it was time to stick the magnets to the glass; here’s an interior magnet, that secures the shade via another magnet sewn into the shade:

Interior magnet

A view of the interior magnets from outside, without the shade:

Interior magnets

We attached exterior magnets across the top… which turned out to be incorrect (more on that later):

Exterior magnets

To aid with installation, we stuck the magnets to an inverted cake pan (they are very powerful, so we needed to take care to keep them separated):

External magnets

We also got shades for the side windows. Here I’m preparing to install the driver one:

Driver window

I attached the magnets to the side shades, in preparation for installing them:

Attaching magnets

After positioning the shades, the magnets are stuck to the glass, and the shades removed for 72 hours, to let the double-sided adhesive cure:

Exterior magnets

When not in use, the shades are stored in a bag:

Bag

Adding the shades is easy; just lift them into place, and they stick and align automatically; they came with two poles to help reach the top:

Adding shades

We also got covers for the mirrors:

Adding shades

Adding shades

Adding shades

Here are the shades when first installed, before they had worked out their wrinkles from shipping:

Shade installed

Notice that there are color-matched covers for the wipers, too:

Shade installed

Shades installed

Shade installed

Shades installed

A view of me standing outside from inside:

View of outside

After installation, we had four magnets leftover… oops:

Leftover magnets

We had followed the installation instructions, which said to use four external magnets across the top:

Installation instructions

Installation instructions

But apparently for our coach we didn’t need that; we should have used interior magnets. So at our next campsite, we corrected that.

Here I’m using the windshield wiper to aid unrolling the shade:

Unrolling shade

I used my ladder again to remove the four exterior magnets across the top, and replace them with interior ones; it was pretty easy:

Shade and ladder

Like so:

Inside magnets

That is tidier when the shade isn’t in place, and seems to hold it more securely.

Here are some pictures of the shades installed:

Shade installed

Mirror cover:

Mirror cover

Driver side:

Driver side

Passenger side:

Passenger side

We’re very happy with the shades, both from how they look, the extra privacy they give us, and the heat management benefits:

Side and front

A couple more shots from another campground, without the palm tree shadow and site label:

Magne Shade

Magne Shade

Highly recommended!