Why Is My Garage Door So Loud?
A garage door should be a quiet hum, not an event. When it gets loud, the noise is usually telling you exactly which part is wearing out, and on Cape Cod, salt-corroded hardware makes doors noisy faster. Here’s how to read it.
Match the noise to the cause
- Squealing or screeching: dry, worn, or rusted rollers and hinges. Often the cheapest fix: sometimes just lubrication, sometimes new rollers.
- Grinding: frequently the opener, with a stripped drive gear or a worn belt or chain drive. See opener repair.
- A single loud bang: almost always a spring letting go. Stop using the door if you heard this.
- Rattling and vibrating: bolts, brackets, and hardware shaken loose over time, common after a hard Cape winter.
- Straining or laboring: the opener fighting a door that’s out of balance, which points back to the springs or cables.
Don’t just turn up the tolerance
A loud door is an early-warning system. The squeal you ignore in October is a seized roller and a bent track by February. It’s almost always cheaper to fix a door while it still works, and a yearly tune-up with fresh lubrication quiets most doors and catches the rest before they fail.
If your door has gone from a hum to a racket, don’t wait for the bang. Call Rick at (508) 563-6266 for a fixed-price quote, from Sandwich to Harwich.
Rather just ask Rick? Give him a call.
Straight answers and one fixed price on any garage door repair or install across Cape Cod.
(508) 563-6266