Does your garage door opener stop and reverse.
Garage door reverses before hitting the floor.
Garage door openers have an adjustment screw that controls the closing force the pressure with which a door is allowed to descend before the motor switches off.
Photo eyes or safety sensors are mounted to the track on either side of the garage door about 6 inches up from the ground.
The garage door will automatically go in reverse whenever it hits an obstruction such as the driveway or ground.
The photo eyes send an infrared beam across the bottom of your garage door opening if that beam is broken the door will reverse.
By repositioning them the switch that they trigger activates earlier or later thus increasing or decreasing the travel.
This is almost always the result of a dirty or obstructed safety feature.
If there s anything that s blocking the threshold even slightly your garage door will sense the blockage and reverse the direction to prevent damage or threats to safety.
If you find that your garage door is reversing before even hitting the floor then it could be possible that there is a problem with the close force setting.
You can easily try this method to test your auto reverse.
We place the block on the floor under the door.
It goes partway down reverses direction and goes back up again.
When the door reverses before it even hits the floor this is often because the close force setting needs adjustment.
This video will show you a few quick.
Two possible problems can lead to a garage door reversing before it even touches the floor.
Before you break out your toolbox or call a professional for help take a look at your garage door s threshold.
Maybe you have to hold the garage door button down for the door to close.
If the reversing mechanism fails disconnect the door opener until the auto reverse is repaired.
When you activate the opener the clips move with the chain and hit the auto reverse switch when they reach it.
The cpsc recommends testing the garage door opener reversing mechanism every month.
This setting basically controls how much force is allowed when closing the garage door.