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When it comes to Garage Doors, We are the Good Guys!
At The Good
Guys Garage Door Company we are dedicated to providing our
customers with more than just a garage door. We want your
experience to be positive before, during, and after the
sale. We warranty all our work and we strive to be better
than anyone in the business. Call Today 972-400-5957
Garage
Doors, Openers and Springs Break At The Most Inopportune Times! Don't
Forget to Bookmark
this Site! and Add Our Number
to Your Cell Phone.
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Do-it-Yourself
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Door Torsion Springs |
Color
codes |
Torsion Springs
Measure the length of the unwound
spring.
Do not measure the end caps of the springs. If your garage
door has
left and right wound springs, measure both, as they may
differ.
Next, Measure the Inside
Diameter (ID) of the spring.
Next, Determine the Wire
Size.
Measure the length of 10 coils of the spring.
Example: 10 coils measures 2 1/4" = .225 wire size.
(See chart below for examples)
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Spring Wire Chart
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Length of 10 Coils
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Length of 20 Coils
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Wire Size
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1 1/4"
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2 1/2" |
.125
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1 3/8"
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2 3/4" |
.135
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1 7/16"
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2 7/8" |
.142
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1 1/2"
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3" |
.1483
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1 9/16"
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3 1/8" |
.1562
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1 5/8"
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3 1/4" |
.162
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1 11/16"
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3 3/8" |
.170
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| 1 3/4" |
3 1/2" |
.177 |
| 1 7/8" |
3 3/4" |
.1875 |
| 1 15/16" |
3 7/8" |
.192 |
| 2 1/16" |
4 1/8" |
.207 |
| 2 3/16" |
4 3/8" |
.2187 |
| 2 1/4" |
4 1/2" |
.2253 |
| 2 5/16" |
4 7/8" |
.2343 |
| 2 7/16" |
4 7/8" |
.2437 |
| 2 1/2" |
5" |
.250 |
| 2 5/8" |
5 1/4" |
.2625 |
| 2 3/4" |
5 1/2" |
.273 |
| 2 13/16" |
5 5/8" |
.283 |
| 2 7/8" |
5 3/4" |
.289 |
| 2 15/16" |
5 7/8" |
.295 |
| 3 1/16" |
6 1/8" |
.3065 |
| 3 1/8" |
6 1/4" |
.3125 |
| 3 3/16" |
6 3/8" |
.3195 |
| 3 5/16" |
6 5/8" |
.331 |
| 3 7/16" |
6 7/8" |
.3437 |
| 3 5/8" |
7 1/4" |
.3625 |
| 3 3/4" |
7 1/2" |
.375 |
| 3 15/16" |
7 7/8" |
.3938 |
| 4 1/16" |
8 1/8" |
.4062 |
| 4 7/32" |
8 7/16" |
.4218 |
| 4 5/16" |
8 5/8" |
.4305 |
| 4 3/8" |
8 3/4" |
.4375 |
| 4 17/32" |
9 1/16" |
.4531 |
| 4 5/8" |
9 1/4" |
.4615 |
| 4 11/16" |
9 3/8" |
.4687 |
| 4 7/8" |
9 3/4" |
.490 |
| 5" |
10" |
.500 |
| 5 5/16" |
10 5/8" |
.5312 |
| 5 5/8" |
11 1/4" |
.5625 |
| 6 1/4" |
12 1/2" |
.625 |
Old Springs - Your garage door’s springs are arguably the
most important and most dangerous part of your door. Springs
wear out. When they break, injury can result. If you have an
older garage door, have your springs inspected by a
professional technician and replaced if needed. If your door
has two springs, both should be replaced, even if one is not
broken. This will not only prevent any damage caused by the
breaking of the second spring, but also keep your door
working efficiently.
Loud Springs - Springs can squeak and be noisy. This is
caused by normal use and does not necessarily indicate a
problem. Before calling a professional service technician,
use a spray-on lubricant (recommended especially for garage
doors). If the noise persists, call a professional garage
door installer for service. WARNING - Springs are under high
tension. Only qualified persons should adjust them.
Garage door springs, cables, brackets, and other hardware
attached to the springs are under very high tension and, if
handled improperly, can cause serious injury. Only a
qualified professional or a mechanically experienced person
should adjust them, but only by carefully following the
manufacturer's instructions.
The torsion springs (the springs above the door) should only
be adjusted by a professional. Do not attempt to repair or
adjust torsion springs yourself.
A restraining cable or other device should be installed on
the extension spring (the spring along the side of the door)
to help contain the spring if it breaks.
WARNING - Never remove, adjust, or loosen the screws on the
bottom brackets of the door. These brackets are connected to
the spring by the lift cable and are under extreme tension.
Lubrication
Regularly lubricate the moving parts of the door. However,
do not lubricate plastic idler bearings. Consult the door
owner's manual for the manufacturer's recommendation.
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| DASMA
OFFICIAL COLOR CODES |
| TORSION
SPRINGS |
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.148
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TAN |
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.162
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GREEN |
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.177
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GOLD |
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.1875
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BLUE |
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.192
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ORANGE |
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.207
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YELLOW |
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.2187
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WHITE |
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.2253
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RED |
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.2343
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BROWN |
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.2437
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GREEN |
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.250
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GOLD |
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.2625
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BLUE |
| .273 |
ORANGE |
| .283 |
LT. BLUE |
| .289 |
YELLOW |
| .289 |
WHITE |
| .295 |
BROWN |
| .3095 |
TAN |
| .3195 |
GREEN |
| .331 |
GOLD |
| .3437 |
BLUE |
| .3625 |
ORANGE |
| .375 |
LT. BLUE |
| .3938 |
YELLOW |
| .4062 |
WHITE |
| .4218 |
RED |
| .4305 |
BROWN |
| .4375 |
TAN |
| .4531 |
GREEN |
| .4615 |
GOLD |
| .4687 |
BLUE |
| .490 |
LT. BLUE |
| .500 |
YELLOW |
| .5312 |
WHITE |
| .5625 |
RED |
If you currently
have 2 springs on your garage door, you should replace both
springs at the same time.
About City:
Plano, TX
The community of
Plano originated in the early 1840′s in the Republic of
Texas. Most of the early pioneers migrated from Kentucky and
Tennessee as small groups of settlers found their way to
Collin County’s blackland prairie. Initial efforts to settle
the area began in 1841, but progress was halted by Indian
attacks until 1844. The settlements were widely scattered in
1844 and only a few were made in 1845. In 1846, William
Foreman bought Peter’s Colony land from Sanford Beck and
settled a half-mile northeast of Plano. Plano’s birth was
due in part to the enterprises of the Foreman family. Mr.
Foreman erected a sawmill and gristmill that would be in
demand by his neighbors. Later a store and gin were added and
these facilities attracted other settlers to the area.
Joseph, Daniel and Samuel Klepper took up their head-rights in
1847 at the present site of the city of Plano. Many more
people came to help form a community. Silas Harrington, his
brother Alfred and Dr. Henry Dye came to settle in 1848. Mr.
Dye was the first medical doctor in the settlement. Mail
service was established around 1850 and William Foreman’s
home became the unofficial post office. The scattered
settlements had now become a closer community and Dr. Dye felt
the need for a proper name and he dispatched to Washington
D.C., an application requesting the name of Fillmore, in honor
of the President of the United States. The name Fillmore was
rejected and the name Foreman was suggested but declined by
William Foreman. Dr. Dye, determined to have a community with
a recognized name suggested Plano. He understood the word
Plano to mean “plain” (to describe the surrounding
terrain) in Spanish. Postal authorities approved the name and
Plano became the name of the community. William Foreman served
as the first postmaster.
Although raising livestock was the principal business in the
county, more and more of the populace began farming the rich,
black land. Churches and schools were built and local business
began to prosper. In the closing years of the 1850s growth was
steady, but this halted with the arrival of the Civil War.
From 1861-1864, the growth of Plano was at a standstill. As
the South would surrender in defeat, the men began to return
to Plano to pick up their run-down farms and persist again to
open more business and trade to attract new people to the
area. New people came from the mechanized North as well as the
South to escape their gutted communities and farms to start a
new life.
With the completion of the Houston and Texas Railroad in 1872,
the city was on its way to new growth. By 1874 the population
numbered over 500. Plano was the first depot by rail entering
Collin County by the south. The city was incorporated in June,
1873, and the town’s first official mayor was C.J.E. Kellner.
Fires in the business district destroyed the original
buildings that were constructed with the coming of the
railroad; the oldest structure in the district was the only
building to survive the fire of 1881 in which 51 places of
business were destroyed–the entire business district.
Plano’s determined businessmen would not be beaten, however,
and after a short time of “business as usual,” the
reconstruction period began. Old burned and wooden structures
were replaced with modern brick buildings and a new look of
prosperity took place. Buildings and business flourished in
the 1880′s. Almost anything would be bought or traded in
Plano.
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