A yearly tune-up catches the small problems — a worn roller, a loose bracket, a misaligned sensor — before they turn into a Saturday-morning breakdown.
Cold weather makes steel springs more brittle and grease thicker and less effective, which is part of why garage door failures spike in winter. Road salt and slush tracked into the garage also accelerates rust on hardware near the floor. An annual tune-up before winter — ideally fall — is the single best-value thing a homeowner can do to avoid an emergency call in January.
An unbalanced door forces the opener to work harder than it should, which shortens the opener's lifespan and can mask a spring that's already starting to weaken. If a door doesn't hold its position when disconnected from the opener and lifted halfway by hand, that's usually a sign the spring tension needs adjustment — something we check as standard on every tune-up.
A quick inspection now is cheaper than an emergency repair later — call to schedule.
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