If you've ever walked into your garage and seen a steel wire dangling like a loose shoelace, or found your door hanging at a terrifying 45-degree angle, you are witnessing a cable failure. In Jones, OK, where garage doors are often the most-used entry point to the home, cables are the unsung workhorses that translate the raw power of your springs into the smooth lifting of your door.
At Green Garage Doors, we operate under a single, unwavering principle: The cable never acts alone. A garage door cable is part of a high-tension partnership. When a cable snaps, frays, or jumps off its drum, it is almost always because a "partner" component—a spring, a drum, or a track—failed first. Most companies will just swap the wire and leave. We go deeper. We replace the cable and fix the relationship that broke it, ensuring you aren't calling us back in three months for the exact same problem. Call (888) 670-9331.
Recognizing a cable issue before it leads to a total system collapse can save you hundreds in secondary repairs.
If the cable has no tension and is simply hanging limp, the connection has been lost. Either the cable has snapped, or the spring—its primary partner—has broken, removing the tension that keeps the cable taut.
A garage door uses two cables to lift evenly. If one cable snaps or slips off the drum, that side of the door will plummet while the other stays held by the remaining cable. Do not attempt to operate a crooked door; you will bend the tracks and damage the panels.
This often happens when the door hits an obstruction while closing. The cable loses tension for a split second, jumps the grooves in the drum, and becomes a "bird's nest" of steel wire around the shaft.
Steel cables are made of dozens of tiny wires twisted together. In the Jones humidity, these strands can rust and snap one by one. If your cable looks "fuzzy" or has silver splinters sticking out, it is a ticking time bomb.
When the door is down, the cables should still be tight. If there is a visible loop or "play" in the wire, your springs are likely losing tension or your drums were never set correctly.
Cables are incredibly strong, but they are not invincible. Their failure is usually a symptom of a larger mechanical drama.
The spring does the heavy lifting; the cable is just the messenger. When a spring snaps, it often sends a violent shockwave through the cable. If the cable was already aged or rusted, this sudden jolt will snap it instantly.
The drum is the spool the cable winds onto. If the drum is loose, cracked, or shifted even a fraction of an inch, the cable won't seat in its grooves. It will jump the drum, tangle, and eventually shear itself against the brackets.
If a roller is seized or a track is bent, the door becomes much harder to pull. This adds "drag" that the cable has to overcome. Cables are rated for the weight of the door, not the weight of the door plus the friction of a broken track.
In Jones, OK, the salt air is a silent killer. It gets between the twisted strands of the cable where you can't see it, eating away at the steel until the cable is hollowed out and ready to fail.
We fix the cable and the relationship that broke it. Same-day service.
Call (888) 670-9331To fix a cable correctly, you have to understand its relationships.
The spring provides the energy; the cable provides the reach. At Green Garage Doors, we always test the balance of the springs when we replace a cable. If the spring isn't "pulling its weight," the new cable will be under constant, improper stress.
The drum acts as the "steering" for the cable. We inspect the grooves of your drums for burrs or chips. A chipped drum will act like a knife, slicing through your new cable strands every time the door moves.
The cable attaches to the door at the bottom bracket. If this bracket is rusted or the "pin" is bent, the cable pulls at an angle. This "side-loading" is the leading cause of premature cable fraying.
A residential garage door weighs between 150 and 400 pounds. When a cable fails, that weight is no longer controlled. It can crash down, damaging your car, your garage floor, or anyone standing in the threshold.
A failed cable often leads to:
Bent Tracks: As the door hangs crookedly.
Cracked Panels: From the twisting force.
Burnt Out Openers: As the motor tries to lift an unbalanced, wedged door.
We don't use "universal" cables. We spec the cable to the door.
7x7: 7 strands of 7 wires. Standard, stiff, and reliable for lighter doors.
7x19: 7 strands of 19 wires. Much more flexible and stronger. We use 7x19 for heavy wood doors or high-cycle commercial applications in Jones, OK.
We match the diameter (1/8", 5/32", or 3/16") to your door's weight. Furthermore, we exclusively use galvanized steel for our Jones customers to provide maximum resistance against our local humidity and salt air.
We almost always recommend replacing cables in pairs.
Symmetry: Both cables have performed the same number of cycles and have been exposed to the same Jones, OK salt air. If one snapped today, the other is likely at 95% failure.
Tension: New cables have slightly more elasticity than old ones. Replacing only one can lead to a door that is permanently "out of level."
Cable, spring, drum, bracket — we check every partner in the system.
Call (888) 670-9331We find what broke the cable (Spring? Drum? Friction?).
We use professional-grade "come-alongs" and clamps to ensure the door cannot fall during the repair.
We safely unwind the torsion springs to remove all energy from the system.
We install new, galvanized, aircraft-grade cables.
We hand-seat the cables into the drum grooves and verify the alignment.
We use a tension gauge to ensure the left and right cables are pulling with identical force.
We run the door through a full 10-point safety and balance check.
Cable Re-Tensioning/Service: $125 — $200. Standard Cable Replacement (Both): $175 — $300. Cable + Spring Bundle: $350 — $600 (The most common "Root Cause" fix).
At Green Garage Doors, we provide Same-Day Service at the Same Price. We don't believe in charging a premium just because your door is stuck. Call (888) 670-9331.
Galvanized, aircraft-grade cables. Tension-gauged equalization.
Call (888) 670-9331We don't just "fix the wire." We restore the partnership. We know Jones's climate, we know the local building codes, and we know that a job done right the first time is the only job worth doing. We offer upfront pricing, high-cycle parts, and a warranty that gives you total peace of mind.
From the coast to the suburbs, we provide expert cable repair to the entire Jones, OK metro area. Call (888) 670-9331.
Frayed, snapped, or tangled — our team is ready today.
Call (888) 670-9331Cable re-tensioning/service: $125-$200. Standard cable replacement (both): $175-$300. Cable + spring bundle (the most common root cause fix): $350-$600. Same-day service at no extra charge.
The #1 reason is a broken spring — the spring sends a violent shockwave through the cable. Other causes include drum misalignment, seized rollers creating extra drag, and Jones humidity/salt air corroding cable strands from the inside out.
Almost always yes. Both cables have the same cycles and salt-air exposure. If one snapped, the other is at 95% failure. Also, new cables have slightly more elasticity than old ones — replacing only one can leave the door permanently out of level.
Yes. A residential garage door weighs 150-400 pounds. When a cable fails, that weight is uncontrolled — it can crash down on your car, garage floor, or anyone in the threshold. Do not operate a crooked door.
7x7 (7 strands of 7 wires) is standard, stiff, and reliable for lighter doors. 7x19 (7 strands of 19 wires) is much more flexible and stronger, used for heavy wood doors or high-cycle commercial applications.
The cable never acts alone. The spring provides energy, the cable provides reach. If the spring isn't pulling its weight, the new cable will be under constant improper stress. We fix the relationship, not just the wire.
A tangled cable that jumped the drum grooves and formed a bird's nest around the shaft usually needs replacement. The kinking damages the wire structure, creating weak points that will fail under tension.
Salt air gets between the twisted strands where you can't see it, eating away at the steel until the cable is hollowed out. We exclusively use galvanized steel cables for Jones customers to resist this corrosion.
Don't let a loose cable turn into a fallen door. Whether yours is frayed, snapped, or tangled, our team is ready to help today.
Call (888) 670-9331. We'll get your door level, safe, and running smooth.