mcgyverit
Well-known member
Had a torsion spring break on my double garage door. as you are standing inside the garage, it would be on the right side of center. Just so happens that the right side is lower by about 1" when compared to the floor and the header. and when closed there is a gap on the left side.
on the very end of the steel tube that the springs are clamped to, is the pulley with the cable that attaches to the bottom of the door. what I am guessing is that when I put the pulley back on I didn't get the cable tight on the pulley as needed and then with the weight of the door it has stretch allowing the door to be lower on the right than the left.
so my question is, couldn't I clamp the door in place in the down position, loosen the pulley on the tube, crank the pulley around to help lift the door up the amount that I need and then tighten the 2 bolts back on the tubing?
while the tubing has the tension on it, it really cant go anywhere since the left side is still tied to the door, correct?
or if possible, do all this in the up position?
on the very end of the steel tube that the springs are clamped to, is the pulley with the cable that attaches to the bottom of the door. what I am guessing is that when I put the pulley back on I didn't get the cable tight on the pulley as needed and then with the weight of the door it has stretch allowing the door to be lower on the right than the left.
so my question is, couldn't I clamp the door in place in the down position, loosen the pulley on the tube, crank the pulley around to help lift the door up the amount that I need and then tighten the 2 bolts back on the tubing?
while the tubing has the tension on it, it really cant go anywhere since the left side is still tied to the door, correct?
or if possible, do all this in the up position?
