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Garage Door Springs

Springs are the most critical — and most dangerous — component of your garage door system. Learn about the different types and why professional service is essential.

Educational resource —Spring sizes, wire gauge, length, inside diameter, cycle rating, and setup vary by door. U1 Garage Doors can provide standard and custom-order springs based on your door's weight, height, track setup, and usage needs. These pages are shown to help you understand common options — not as a fixed product catalog.

Safety Warning

Garage door springs are under extreme tension and can cause severe injury or death if handled improperly. Never attempt to replace or adjust garage door springs yourself. Always hire a licensed professional.

Why Spring Size Matters

Every garage door has a specific weight, height, and track configuration. Springs must be precisely matched to these measurements. A spring that is too weak will not fully support the door, causing the opener to work harder and wear out faster. A spring that is too strong can make the door fly open uncontrollably.

Why a Door Can Damage an Opener if Springs Are Wrong

Your garage door opener is designed to move the door — not to lift its full weight. The springs do the heavy lifting by counterbalancing the door. When springs are broken, worn, or the wrong size, the opener has to compensate by working much harder than it was designed to. This leads to overheating, stripped gears, and premature motor failure.

Why Professional Balancing Matters

After new springs are installed, the door must be properly balanced. A balanced door should stay in place when opened halfway and released. If it slides up or down on its own, the tension is wrong. An unbalanced door puts uneven stress on all components — springs, cables, brackets, tracks, and the opener — accelerating wear across the entire system.

Torsion Springs vs Extension Springs

Understanding the key differences helps you know what system your garage uses.

FeatureTorsion SpringsExtension Springs
LocationAbove the door openingAlong the horizontal tracks (both sides)
How They WorkTwisting (torque) forceStretching force
OperationSmoother, more controlledCan be less even
SafetyContained on shaft (safer failure)Requires safety cables (can fly if broken)
Common UseMost modern installationsOlder installations, single-car garages
Lifespan10,000-100,000 cycles10,000-15,000 cycles typical

Need Spring Replacement?

Our team can help you choose the right option for your home and budget.

Not sure what fits your door? We'll inspect the setup and explain your options before work begins.

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