Adjusting an extension spring door.
How to balance a garage door with side springs.
Periodic maintenance of your garage door includes balancing to ensure the door opens and closes with maximum efficiency.
You ll find a helpful explanation on our blog at.
If the door was closing too quickly move the spring to the next higher hole on the bracket.
Open it just as wide as you can without hitting the garage door opener s stop bolt and place a clamp on the track on both sides to keep the door in.
This tension makes it easier to lift the garage door from its closed position.
Balancing a garage door does not involve circus tricks teeter totters or special gymnastic skills.
Once the spring is free of tension remove from its track hanger.
A garage door should stay down when closed open when raised and at the halfway point when raised halfway.
Is there a gap along the floor when it is closed.
Locate the torsion springs on the bar above the garage door.
Garage door springs offset the weight of the door and allow it to open and close with ease.
Instead it s all about the relationship between the garage door s weight and the springs used to counter that weight.
Doors that are out of balance will cause extra loads for your opener and may even cause it to fail prematurely.
Retest the door balance as you did in step 1.
Adjust the springs on both sides of the door the same way.
With an extension spring door the goal is to take all the tension off the door before you even think about touching a spring you can do this by opening the door all the way and propping it up with a ladder.
What is the door doing.
See door repair and overhead garage door repair for a complete listing of garage door and door topics.
Spot the bar that runs parallel to the top of the garage door and has 2 springs on it.
Side mounted springs are long heavy springs mounted on each side of the upper garage door track.
An unbalanced door can pose safety issues and tax a garage door opener.
A problem with the spring tension could cause the door to open or close unevenly improperly or at the wrong speed and adjusting the springs will likely solve the problem.
Look at the wall just above the garage door.
Too much tension on the springs.
The springs extend along the shaft and work by twisting as the garage door closes by means of cables attached to each side of the lowest garage door panel.
The springs are not balanced and the side where the gap occurs needs to be adjusted.