bowlofturtle
Well-known member
Ok guys… I need some serious help here. I know next to nothing on woodworking/the terminology used and saws. Right now I’m looking more of the terminology because most likely I’ll be paying someone to do the work for me.
First off, this is a 20x20 brick garage. Probably around 50-60 years old. The previous homeowner had their garage torsion spring break and they rigged up some type of helper pulley spring setup. So here is my problems, I took the best pictures I could. One of the beams seem to have split. It runs the whole length of the garage. The metal bracket along the tracks of the door and the 2 coil springs is what the previous owner installed to help the door go up. I think this is what caused the beam to break.
Now my main question is can I just un-nail that beam and get a new board and nail that in… is this those “load bearing” stuff people talk about, I don’t want the garage to collapse. I’m also considering getting the coil spring repair/replaced. So I think I should be able to remove that metal bracket.
Again… I know nothing about the terms and stuff so please bear with me.
The last picture, its the beam furthest from the picture.
First off, this is a 20x20 brick garage. Probably around 50-60 years old. The previous homeowner had their garage torsion spring break and they rigged up some type of helper pulley spring setup. So here is my problems, I took the best pictures I could. One of the beams seem to have split. It runs the whole length of the garage. The metal bracket along the tracks of the door and the 2 coil springs is what the previous owner installed to help the door go up. I think this is what caused the beam to break.
Now my main question is can I just un-nail that beam and get a new board and nail that in… is this those “load bearing” stuff people talk about, I don’t want the garage to collapse. I’m also considering getting the coil spring repair/replaced. So I think I should be able to remove that metal bracket.
Again… I know nothing about the terms and stuff so please bear with me.
The last picture, its the beam furthest from the picture.
