When a garage door spring snaps, the sound is unmistakable—a loud, gunshot-like crack that echoes through the entire house. In that instant, your garage door transforms from a convenient automated entry into a 300-pound dead weight that refuses to budge. If you are reading this, you are likely stuck, either with your car trapped inside or your home unsecured because the door is partially open.
In Clovis, NM, the problem with garage door springs is rarely just the fact that they break. The real issue is the specification problem. Most homeowners don't realize that a spring is a precision-engineered counterweight. Many companies in the Clovis metro area carry a "one-size-fits-most" inventory on their trucks. They install a spring that is "close enough," and then they over-wind it to make the door move. This is why so many springs in our area fail in just three years instead of twelve. At Green Garage Doors, we believe that spring selection is the repair. We don't guess; we weigh. By matching the exact wire gauge, length, and diameter to your door's specific weight, we ensure a repair that lasts for a decade or more, not just until the check clears. Call (888) 670-9331.
Spring failure isn't always as dramatic as a loud bang. Often, the springs degrade slowly, giving you warning signs before they leave you stranded.
This is the "Stage 4" failure. The spring has physically separated into two pieces. If you look at the metal bar above your door (for torsion systems) and see a 2-inch gap in the coils, the spring is gone. Your opener may hum or click, but it cannot lift the door without the spring's help.
Steel has an elastic limit. Over thousands of cycles, the metal molecules in your spring begin to stretch and lose their "memory." If you pull your emergency release cord and find it difficult to lift the door manually, your springs are fatigued. They are no longer providing the lift they were designed for.
If the spring looks like it has a "break" in the middle, it has snapped. Torsion springs are held on a center shaft, so even when they break, they stay on the bar. However, the energy transfer is gone.
A perfectly balanced garage door should stay exactly where you leave it when opened halfway by hand. If it crashes to the floor or rockets toward the ceiling, the spring tension is incorrect. This imbalance is the leading cause of "burnt-out" garage door openers in Clovis, NM.
In a dual-spring system, if one spring is significantly older or has a different tension than the other, the door will "cock" in the tracks. This causes the rollers to bind and can lead to a dangerous off-track event.
Modern openers have "force sensors." If the opener detects that it is pulling more weight than it should (because the spring isn't helping), it will shut down to protect its internal gears. If your door starts to open and then reverses, your spring is likely the culprit.
This is often "coil bind." When a spring is dry and rusty, the coils grate against each other as they wind. This friction generates heat, which accelerates metal fatigue and eventually leads to a snap.
Rust is more than an eyesore; it's a chemical attack on the steel's integrity. In Clovis, the humidity causes "pitting" rust. This creates microscopic weak points on the wire. When the spring winds, it snaps at the point of the deepest rust.
A garage door spring is a "stored energy" device. It is essentially a battery that stores physical force. When that battery fails, the results are immediate and heavy.
Your garage door opener is a "pusher and puller," not a "lifter." It is designed to move a door that weighs only 5 to 10 pounds when properly counterbalanced by the springs. When the spring breaks, the opener suddenly has to lift the full 200+ pounds of the door. Most openers have plastic gears that will strip instantly under this load.
Attempting to open a door with a broken spring is a recipe for disaster. If the door is halfway up and the remaining cable or spring gives way, the door becomes a falling guillotine. Never try to "help" the opener by lifting the door yourself while the motor is running; this is a leading cause of back injuries and crushed fingers.
When a spring snaps, it often sends a shockwave through the lifting cables. If the cables are old, they may fray or snap as well. Furthermore, the extreme weight can bend the top panel of your door where the opener arm is attached.
Torsion springs are under hundreds of foot-pounds of torque. A single slip with a winding bar can result in broken bones, facial injuries, or worse. Professional technicians use specialized, hardened-steel winding bars and safety protocols to ensure the energy is managed safely.
Specification-first. Door weighed, not guessed. Same-day emergency service.
Call (888) 670-9331Clovis, NM is a hostile environment for raw steel. We see springs fail here at a much higher rate than in inland regions.
Our humidity acts as a catalyst for oxidation. Most springs are made of oil-tempered steel, which has very little natural rust resistance. Without regular lubrication, the moisture in the Clovis, NM air eats into the wire, causing it to snap prematurely.
If you live within 10 miles of the coast, your springs are breathing in salt. Salt crystals accelerate the "pitting" process. We often recommend galvanized or powder-coated springs for our coastal customers to provide an extra layer of defense against this corrosion.
Most homeowners never think to lubricate their springs. A spring is a moving part; every time the door moves, the coils rub. Without a silicone or lithium-based lubricant, this friction creates "micro-fractures" in the steel.
This is the most common reason for early failure. If a technician installs a spring that is slightly too short, they have to "over-wind" it to get the door to balance. This puts the steel under more tension than its engineering limit, causing it to snap in 3 years instead of 10.
Replacement isn't always the only answer, though it is the most common. At Green Garage Doors, we evaluate if a "repair" (adjustment) is safe.
If your springs are still in good physical condition but the door is slightly heavy, we can add "turns" of tension to the spring. This is common as springs "settle" after the first year of installation.
We provide professional-grade lubrication that penetrates between the coils. This won't fix a broken spring, but it will certainly stop a "popping" spring from snapping next month.
Sometimes the spring is fine, but the end-bearing plates have seized. This makes the door feel like the spring is broken. We service the entire torsion assembly to ensure the spring isn't fighting a seized bearing.
This is the most critical section of this page. At Green Garage Doors, we treat spring replacement as an engineering task.
Every garage door has a unique "IPPT" (Inch-Pounds Per Turn) requirement. If you install the wrong spring, the door may be "hot" (wants to fly open) or "heavy" (wobs the opener of its lifespan).
Most companies look at the door size (e.g., 16x7) and guess the weight. We don't guess. We use a digital scale to weigh the door. A 16x7 door can weigh 150 lbs or 280 lbs depending on the insulation and glass. We match the spring to the actual weight.
Wire gauge is measured to the thousandth of an inch. A .250 wire is significantly stronger than a .243 wire. We ensure the wire gauge is exactly what your door's mass requires.
Residential springs usually come in 1.75-inch or 2-inch inside diameters. Installing the wrong diameter can cause the spring to "bow" on the shaft, leading to a noisy, vibrating door.
A longer spring with the same wire gauge will last longer because the stress is distributed over more coils. We often "up-size" the length of the spring to give our Clovis, NM customers a longer lifespan.
Springs are directional. Installing a right-wound spring on the left side of the bracket is a common "amateur" mistake that results in the spring unwinding and failing immediately.
Wire gauge, coil diameter, spring length — matched to your door's actual weight.
Call (888) 670-9331These are mounted on a metal shaft above the door. They are the smoothest and safest springs because if they break, the shaft keeps them from flying across the garage.
Smaller doors use one spring. Large, double-car doors should always use two. If your 16-foot door only has one spring, it is under extreme stress. We often recommend a "Two-Spring Conversion" to double the reliability of your system.
These run along the horizontal tracks. They stretch like giant rubber bands. These are more dangerous when they break, which is why we always ensure they have safety cables installed through the center.
Standard springs are rated for 10,000 cycles (about 6-7 years of use). We offer "High-Cycle" upgrades that use thicker wire and longer coils to provide 25,000+ cycles. For a family that uses the garage as their main front door, this is the most cost-effective upgrade available.
Found on Wayne Dalton doors, these springs are hidden inside a tube. They require specialized tools to repair. Our technicians are fully trained in the TorqueMaster system.
If you have a two-spring system and only one is broken, you might be tempted to just fix the broken one. Here is why we almost always recommend replacing both.
Springs are like tires; they wear at the same rate. If the left spring snapped today, the right spring has performed the exact same number of cycles and is likely at 95% metal fatigue. It will probably snap within weeks of the repair.
A new spring is "stronger" than an old, fatigued spring. If you only replace one, the door will be unbalanced, pulling harder on one side. This causes the door to "rack" in the tracks, damaging your rollers and hinges.
The largest part of the cost of a spring repair is the service call and the labor. Replacing the second spring while the technician is already there usually only adds the cost of the part itself. If you wait, you will pay for a second service call and second labor charge in a few months.
If you have to replace your springs anyway, why not make the system better than it was?
Move from a 7-year spring to a 15-year spring. It is the best "insurance" against future garage door emergencies.
Extension springs are noisy and jerky. We can install a new torsion shaft and springs on almost any door, transforming it into a quiet, smooth-operating system.
Unlike standard oil-tempered springs, galvanized springs have a zinc coating that prevents rust. In the Clovis, NM humidity, this is a game-changer for longevity.
60+ spring sizes. Every type. Matched to your door's actual weight.
Call (888) 670-9331We follow a 7-step protocol to ensure your door is safer when we leave than it was when it was new.
We don't guess the weight based on the door size. We use a scale. This is the only way to ensure the spring specification is 100% accurate.
We check the "drums" for chips and the "end-bearings" for play. If we put new springs on a system with seized bearings, the new springs will fail early.
We calculate the IPPT (Inch-Pounds Per Turn) required. We select the wire gauge and length that provides the best "Cycle Life" for your budget.
Even a broken spring can have "hidden" tension. We safely unwind the remaining spring and secure the door with professional-grade clamps.
While the springs are off, we have access to the shaft. We clean the rust off the bar and ensure the drums are perfectly aligned so the cables don't "jump" the track.
We install the new springs and wind them to the exact number of turns specified by the manufacturer for your door height.
We disconnect the opener and lift the door by hand. It should move with one finger and stay perfectly still at the halfway point. Only then do we reconnect the opener and recalibrate the safety sensors.
We believe in transparency. While every door is different, here are the general price ranges for the Clovis area.
Size and Weight: A 120-lb door uses cheaper springs than a 300-lb wood door. Cycle Rating: High-cycle springs cost more because they contain more steel. System Type: Torsion systems are generally more labor-intensive than extension systems.
Garage Door Spring Adjustment/Tune-Up: $125 — $175. Single Torsion Spring Replacement: $175 — $300. Dual Torsion Spring Replacement: $250 — $500. Extension Spring Replacement (Pair): $150 — $300. High-Cycle Upgrade Premium: +$50 — $100. Extension-to-Torsion Conversion: $400 — $700.
At Green Garage Doors, we offer Emergency Same-Day Service at no extra charge. We understand that a broken spring is a crisis, not a scheduled event. Call (888) 670-9331.
We are one of the few companies in Clovis, NM that carries over 60 different spring sizes on our trucks. We don't "make it fit"; we install the right part.
Our precision weighing process eliminates the guesswork that causes openers to burn out and springs to snap early.
We source our springs from manufacturers that use high-quality steel and superior coatings designed for coastal environments.
You will receive a firm quote before we touch the door. All our spring replacements come with a minimum 5-year warranty on the part and a 1-year warranty on the labor.
From the downtown core to the furthest suburbs of the Clovis, NM metro area, our trucks are strategically placed to ensure we can reach you within 2 hours of your call.
Don't spend another hour with your car trapped or your home unsecured.
Call (888) 670-9331To understand why we are so obsessive about specifications, you have to understand the math behind the door. A garage door is a "dead weight." Gravity wants it on the floor. To make it "weightless" for the opener, we use a spring to apply an equal and opposite force.
IPPT stands for Inch-Pounds Per Turn. This is the amount of torque a spring generates for every full revolution it is wound.
If your door weighs 200 lbs and your drums have a radius of 4 inches, you need 800 inch-pounds of torque to balance the door.
If we install a spring with an IPPT of 100, we have to wind it exactly 8 times.
If we install a spring with an IPPT of 80 (the wrong spring), we would have to wind it 10 times to lift the door.
Those 2 extra turns put the steel closer to its "elastic limit." It will work for a while, but the metal will "work-harden" and snap much sooner than the correct spring.
Every time your door opens and closes, that is one "cycle." A standard spring is made of wire that is designed to flex 10,000 times before the molecular structure of the steel begins to fail.
If you use your door 4 times a day, that's roughly 1,460 cycles a year. Your spring should last 6.8 years.
If you use your door 8 times a day (common for large families), that spring will break in 3.4 years.
By installing High-Cycle springs, we use wire that is "over-spec'd" for the weight. Because the wire is thicker, it doesn't have to flex as hard to provide the same lift. This allows the molecules to stay within their comfort zone for 25,000 to 50,000 cycles.
The drums at the end of the torsion shaft act as the "lever" that the cables pull on. Different drums have different circumferences. If your previous repairman changed a drum but didn't change the spring to match the new lever-arm length, your door will never be balanced. We check the drum model number as part of our Step 3 Specification Process.
A door that is "hot" means it has too much spring tension. It wants to fly open. While this sounds like it makes the opener's job easier, it's actually dangerous. It puts constant upward pressure on the opener's plastic trolley. Eventually, the trolley will snap, and the door will rocket upward, often crashing into the header and destroying the top panel. Proper specification prevents "hot" doors.
In Clovis, NM, power surges are common. While a surge can fry your opener, a balanced door (thanks to the right spring) provides mechanical surge protection. If the opener's "electronic limits" fail, a perfectly balanced door is less likely to cause a catastrophic mechanical failure because the forces are neutralized.
Trust the experts who know the math. Call us at (888) 670-9331.
Spring adjustment/tune-up: $125-$175. Single torsion spring: $175-$300. Dual torsion springs: $250-$500. Extension spring pair: $150-$300. High-cycle upgrade adds $50-$100. Extension-to-torsion conversion: $400-$700. No emergency surcharge.
Usually a specification problem. If the wrong spring was installed and over-wound to compensate, it operates past its elastic limit and fails in 3 years instead of 10. Humidity, salt air, and lack of lubrication also accelerate failure in Clovis.
Almost always yes. Both springs have performed the same cycles and the remaining spring is likely at 95% metal fatigue. Replacing both avoids a second service call, ensures balanced door operation, and only adds the cost of one part since the technician is already there.
No. Torsion springs are under hundreds of foot-pounds of torque. A slip with a winding bar can cause broken bones, facial injuries, or worse. Professional technicians use specialized hardened-steel winding bars and safety protocols.
Standard springs are rated for 10,000 cycles (6-7 years). High-cycle springs use thicker wire and longer coils for 25,000-100,000 cycles. For families using the garage as their main entry, this is the most cost-effective upgrade available.
A 16x7 door can weigh 150 lbs or 280 lbs depending on insulation and glass. Guessing from a lookup table leads to wrong spring specification, over-winding, and premature failure. We use a digital scale for 100% accurate spring matching.
Torsion springs mount on a shaft above the door and twist to store energy — smoother and safer. Extension springs run along horizontal tracks and stretch like rubber bands — older design, more dangerous when they break. We can convert extension to torsion.
Signs include: door getting heavier to lift, visible gap in spring coils, door won't stay at halfway point, opener struggling or reversing, squealing/grinding sounds from spring area, and visible rust on coils. Any of these warrant professional inspection.
Don't spend another hour with your car trapped or your home unsecured. Experience the difference that professional engineering and a "Specification-First" approach can make.
Call Green Garage Doors today at (888) 670-9331. We'll weigh your door, spec your spring, and get your life back on track before dinner.