I have a custom built, 4-section, overhead wood garage door that is 10-1/2' wide x 7' high. The weight prior to raising this current problem was 165 lbs. so I had 160-170 lb extension springs installed and the door was nicely balanced.
Then I added 10 lbs of 3/4" polyiso insulation and 44 lbs of 1/8" Masonite over that. This took the weight of the door from 165 lbs to about 215 lbs. Needless to say the door is no long nicely balanced on the 160-170 lb extension springs.
I can of course get heavier springs but the cost goes up exponentially. Extension springs up to 180 lb capacity are under $50 a pair on Amazon. Granted not the highest quality, longest lasting springs but more than good enough for a shop environment where they won't get a lot of use (although they will of course remain mostly in the extended position). The 180 lb springs are the heaviest I can find on Amazon though and going to the general garage door market appears to bring the cost up to $150 or more for the pair of springs.
So being the frugal ****** I am I'm trying to figure out if there are any alternatives. One would be to design in a 3rd spring at the center of the door. This would be a small capacity spring to act as a booster to the existing 160 lb springs.
Another is to just try 180 lb springs from Amazon and see if that tilts the problem back over the edge to an adequately, albeit not perfectly, balanced situation. I'm looking at this because while adding the 1/8" Masonite the door didn't begin to drop on it's own until I added the last 1/2 sheet of the two 4x8 sheets used. That would be about the last 11 lbs added.
Third, and finally (unless someone has a more clever idea) is to double up on the springs on both sides. Instead of going to a single 220 lb spring set I could in effect place TWO 110 lb. springs on either side of the door. I could easily enough make a bracket that would grab the pair of ends of the springs in order to get them to act as a team (think of two oxen on a yoke). Perhaps a bit funky but may it would work?
I'll note here that I would have preferred to put a torsion bar set up on this door. However in quite a bit of online searching the only torsion bar setup I could find available was a Clopay on Amazon for $325 for a 9' door and closer to $450 for a 16' door. At 10'6" wide my door falls in between the two so might require a custom setup ??
Attached photo shows the inside of the door with the 3/4" polyiso still exposed on the top and bottom sections, and the 1/8" Masonite already applied to the middle two sections.
Thanks,
BH
Then I added 10 lbs of 3/4" polyiso insulation and 44 lbs of 1/8" Masonite over that. This took the weight of the door from 165 lbs to about 215 lbs. Needless to say the door is no long nicely balanced on the 160-170 lb extension springs.
I can of course get heavier springs but the cost goes up exponentially. Extension springs up to 180 lb capacity are under $50 a pair on Amazon. Granted not the highest quality, longest lasting springs but more than good enough for a shop environment where they won't get a lot of use (although they will of course remain mostly in the extended position). The 180 lb springs are the heaviest I can find on Amazon though and going to the general garage door market appears to bring the cost up to $150 or more for the pair of springs.
So being the frugal ****** I am I'm trying to figure out if there are any alternatives. One would be to design in a 3rd spring at the center of the door. This would be a small capacity spring to act as a booster to the existing 160 lb springs.
Another is to just try 180 lb springs from Amazon and see if that tilts the problem back over the edge to an adequately, albeit not perfectly, balanced situation. I'm looking at this because while adding the 1/8" Masonite the door didn't begin to drop on it's own until I added the last 1/2 sheet of the two 4x8 sheets used. That would be about the last 11 lbs added.
Third, and finally (unless someone has a more clever idea) is to double up on the springs on both sides. Instead of going to a single 220 lb spring set I could in effect place TWO 110 lb. springs on either side of the door. I could easily enough make a bracket that would grab the pair of ends of the springs in order to get them to act as a team (think of two oxen on a yoke). Perhaps a bit funky but may it would work?
I'll note here that I would have preferred to put a torsion bar set up on this door. However in quite a bit of online searching the only torsion bar setup I could find available was a Clopay on Amazon for $325 for a 9' door and closer to $450 for a 16' door. At 10'6" wide my door falls in between the two so might require a custom setup ??
Attached photo shows the inside of the door with the 3/4" polyiso still exposed on the top and bottom sections, and the 1/8" Masonite already applied to the middle two sections.
Thanks,
BH
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