


The guy who was killed by his door was ironically doing the same thing that most of the guys on here that disconnect their sensors do, hit the button and duck under the door. Unfortunatley something likely caught his attention for a second, when he turned around he hit his head on the door and fell underneath.
Notice I moved my foot before and after to show that this is not some half assed magic trick, but indeed a true test of nerve in the face of the mutilator known as the "garage door" without sensor.
Please, take this demonstration and pass it along to all you know to so we can finally uncover this killer.....let my pain and risk taking not be in vain!![]()
Please don't take this the wrong way, but would you trust the pressure detector to reverse itself quickly enough if it closed on your neck while you are laying on your back, without tightening the muscles in your neck?
I ask because that's probably the kind of force that could pin and suffocate a small child.
I don't have sensors on one of my normal-use doors, as they weren't there when we bought the house. We live in a cul-de-sac where none of the other residents have children, and right now we don't have any either. Thus, I haven't exactly been in a rush to install them. But, when we have children of our own I don't want to have to worry about it, so they will be installed.
If a guest or one of my nieces or nephews is unsupervised in the garage there are much more deadlier things out there also.

I have to say that I'm with Bradley on this one. Somehow, a lot of us likely grew up before the seeing-eyes on the doors - but with the way everything turns into a lawsuit these days, if there were ever a problem and you disabled a safety feature you'd be pretty much screwed.
The company I work for had someone killed by a garage door. Not that it makes any difference, it was a very large industrial roll up garage door (in a building used to house D11 Cat / Dozers). Guy hit the close button, walked around the front of the Cat blade, tripped on something and fell just under the garage door as it was closing. The door crushed / suffocated him. Not sure the details but it's my guess that the sensing eye was dirty and didn't do it's job.

So this got me to thinking of the dreaded "killer garage door" situations.....in terms of a chain "driven" door, is the max force not the door dropping from it's highest position?
That is, a chain "lowered/raised" unit cannot "crush" you as long as the chain itself does not break...the chain cannot transfer power to the ground as a door is lowered, it would only get slack. Obviously if the chain breaks the door can come down with a pretty good force, but it cannot be pushed down by a chain.
get it?....am I right?
This all goes out the door for a screw driven door however, so keep it to chains.....I am now quite sure I have wasted too much of my life discussing and thinking this!![]()
So this got me to thinking of the dreaded "killer garage door" situations.....in terms of a chain "driven" door, is the max force not the door dropping from it's highest position?
That is, a chain "lowered/raised" unit cannot "crush" you as long as the chain itself does not break...the chain cannot transfer power to the ground as a door is lowered, it would only get slack. Obviously if the chain breaks the door can come down with a pretty good force, but it cannot be pushed down by a chain.
get it?....am I right?
Garage door death ruled accidental
last update: March 17, 2011
Authorities have ruled that the death of a Barnesville man found trapped under a garage door was an accident.
Preliminary autopsy results find that 51-year-old Steve Peterson died of asphyxiation. Barnesville Police Chief Dean Ernst told the Forum newspaper that Peterson apparently was unable to breathe when the garage door came down on his chest. Peterson, a part-owner of Barnesville Bus Co., was found March 7 at the business. The police chief has said Peterson apparently was trying to duck under the garage door as it was closing when he somehow got caught under it.
In the early 1990s, the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) enacted into law new rules ensuring that all garage door openers manufactured after 1992 had external entrapment protection devices, such as infrared sensors or sensing edges, in addition to the internal contact reverse mechanism. Garage door openers made prior to 1993 are safe and reliable if installed, tested, and maintained properly. However, the vast majority of these older units are not equipped with infrared sensors or other external entrapment protection devices, and thus do not meet today's standards for garage door opener safety. To insure the highest degree of safety and customer satisfaction, we believe it is important that pre-1993 garage door openers are replaced, as opposed to being repaired.
I'd like to say that every garage door since 1993 should have a torque sensor on the gear atop the operator that reverses the door should the force exceed that needed to lower the door.
On my garage door, I can stop it with one hand.
Also, these safety eyes seem to be a problem for a lot of people, not only are they a secondary measure after the torque sensor, but the transmitting unit loses power after about 5 years and cost $50 to replace, because it seems you have to buy the transmitter and receiver in a pair. This seems like another government endorsed racket.
So, I made a circuit that you can connect between terminal 2 and 3 on the garage operator and it will simulate the undisturbed beam safety eyes signal. The 555B is a 555 Timer, the main component, which cost $1-$2, the rest of the components, 5 resistors, 2 capacitors, 2 mosfets, and 1 diode, probably cost around $3-$4, so about $5 instead of $50 and the bypasser should last indefinitely.
Be sure to check all laws and neighborhood codes first, of course. This circuit is for educational purposes, solely.
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Of course,
anybody that comes along can push the door bell botton and open your garage for their pleasure.
