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How to Tell Your Garage Door Spring Is About to Fail

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Rusted garage door torsion spring against a scenic Monterey coastline background.

arage door spring failure is one of the most common, and most preventable, causes of emergency garage door repairs along California’s Central Coast. In coastal communities from Monterey to Santa Cruz, salt air corrosion and humidity accelerate spring wear compared to inland climates.

This guide will help you figure out what’s really going on. We’ll walk you through the early warning signs to watch for so you can catch small issues before they become expensive repairs. Clear advice to help you understand what’s happening and what steps to take next.

What Does a Garage Door Spring Actually Do?

A garage door spring counterbalances the weight of the door so your opener doesn’t carry the full load.

Most residential systems use either:

Torsion Spring System

Torsion  store mechanical energy by twisting around a steel shaft. Components include:

They provide smoother operation and longer cycle life but require specialized winding bars and training to adjust safely.

Extension Spring System

Extension springs stretch and contract along the horizontal track. They include:

These are less expensive but generally wear out faster and create more vibration.

Signs to Look Out For

1. Your Garage Door Feels Heavier Than Normal

If your garage door suddenly feels heavier when lifting manually, the spring is likely losing tension.

A properly balanced door should lift smoothly and stay halfway open when disconnected from the opener (using the emergency release cord). If it slams shut or drifts downward, the spring is no longer counterbalancing the door weight.

Risk: Continuing to operate the door can burn out the garage door opener motor or strip nylon drive gears.

2. You Hear a Loud Bang From the Garage

If you heard a sharp, gunshot-like sound in the garage, a torsion spring may have snapped.

When torsion springs break, stored torque releases instantly. Many homeowners in coastal areas mistake this for something falling inside the garage.

3. Visible Rust or Pitting on the Spring Coils

If you see rust flakes or surface pitting, corrosion is actively weakening the steel.

Salt-laden marine air in Carmel-by-the-Sea and coastal Pebble Beach accelerates oxidation. Rust increases friction between coils, causing uneven stress distribution and premature metal fatigue.

Pro Tip: Galvanized springs resist corrosion better than oil-tempered springs in coastal climates but they may have slightly shorter fatigue life under high-cycle usage. Choosing the right material matters more near the ocean.

4. The Door Opens Crooked or Jerky

If one side rises faster than the other, a spring may be unevenly tensioned or partially fractured.

This imbalance stresses:

Left unchecked, this can warp door panels or cause cable derailment from the drum.

5. The Door Only Opens a Few Inches

If your door opens 6–12 inches and stops, a broken torsion spring is likely.

Most modern openers include force-sensing technology. When the spring fails, the opener detects excessive load and stops to prevent motor damage.

Important: This is a mechanical issue, not an electrical one.

6. The Spring Is Over 7–10 Years Old

If your spring is over 10,000 cycles (roughly 7–10 years for most households), it is statistically near failure.

One “cycle” equals one full open and close. Homes where the garage serves as the primary entry point often exceed 1,500 cycles per year.

Coastal-Specific Failure Factor: Salt Air Microfractures

One issue rarely discussed in other blogs is microfracture formation caused by salt crystallization.

In coastal environments like Pacific Grove and Monterey:

This explains why springs near the coast often fail 1–3 years earlier than manufacturer projections.

When Should You NOT Touch the Spring?

You should never attempt DIY torsion spring adjustments without proper winding bars and training.

Torsion systems store extreme rotational energy. Improper handling can result in:

California building standards require safety containment measures for extension systems, but torsion systems rely on proper installation and torque calibration.

What You Can Do to Prevent Spring Failure 

If you live within 2–3 miles of the ocean, apply a light garage-door-specific lubricant (not WD-40) to the spring coils every 3–4 months.

Use:

Avoid:

Regular lubrication reduces coil friction and slows corrosion, especially in humid marine climates.

Quick Diagnostic Checklist

Disconnect the opener and manually lift the door halfway.

The door is healthy if it:

Call for service if:

Should I Replace Before It Breaks?

Proactive replacement reduces emergency downtime and protects your opener.

Reactive replacement costs less upfront but increases risk of:

For Monterey-to-Santa-Cruz homeowners, coastal corrosion makes preventative maintenance more valuable than in inland climates.

Don’t Wait for a Snap!

A broken spring is a major safety hazard and a total inconvenience. If you see rust or hear straining, play it safe and call Aaron Overhead Doors at 831-219-8648 to schedule a professional safety inspection or contact us online with any questions. 

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