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Garage Door Cable Snapped or Frayed
in Garland, TX

Lift cables are the steel wires that run along each side of the door from the bottom bracket up to the spring drum. They carry the door's weight on every cycle. In Garland, summer humidity and occasional heavy rain keep the cable environment damp, and that moisture causes rust that weakens the steel wires from the inside out. Most homeowners don't notice the fraying until a cable snaps and the door drops sharply on one side.

Quick Answer

Lift cables on a garage door snap when they fray from rust or wear over years of use. Garland's humid summers speed up rust on older steel cables. A snapped cable drops one side of the door and makes it dangerous to operate. Stop using the door and call for service. A technician replaces both cables at once so they wear at the same rate going forward.

Garage Door Cable Snapped or Frayed in Garland

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • One side of the door is significantly lower than the other
  • A loose or coiled cable is visible on one side of the door
  • The door jerks or moves unevenly when opening
  • The opener motor strains and hums but barely moves the door
  • Rust or visible fraying on the cable near the bottom bracket

Root Causes

What Causes Garage Door Cable Snapped or Frayed?

1

Rust and Moisture Damage

Steel lift cables corrode when they stay damp, and a Garland garage without good ventilation stays humid from May through September. Rust starts at the cable's contact points, like the drum and the bottom bracket, where moisture collects. Once rust works into the individual wire strands, the cable loses tensile strength quickly and can snap under the load of a normal open cycle.

The Fix

Cable Replacement with Rust Prevention

Both cables are replaced with galvanized steel cables, which resist rust better than plain steel. The technician also inspects the drums and bottom brackets for corrosion that could accelerate wear on the new cables.

2

Cable Wear from Misalignment

When a garage door is even slightly off-balance, one cable carries more weight than the other. Over time, the overloaded cable frays faster at the drum and at the sharp bend around the bottom bracket. Misalignment is common on older doors in Garland subdivisions where the original spring tension has never been checked or adjusted.

The Fix

Cable Replacement and Spring Balance Adjustment

Both cables are replaced and the spring tension is adjusted so the door lifts evenly. A balanced door puts equal load on both cables, which extends their service life significantly.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Rust and Moisture Damage Cable Wear from Misalignment
Rust or orange staining visible on the cable near the floor bracket
One side of the door has always been slightly lower than the other
Cable snapped suddenly without prior warning signs
Cable fraying is worse at the drum or bracket contact points
Door is in a garage that gets wet or has poor airflow