Why Your Opener Works Harder Here Than Most
A garage door opener in Tonawanda runs a marathon every winter. Lake-effect snow rolls off Lake Erie and buries driveways from November into March. Your opener lifts a door that has frozen to the threshold, fights through grit and road salt packed into the tracks, and does it twice a day without complaint. A motor that handles a quiet 1,400 cycles a year in a mild climate ages faster once it has to grind through ice and single-digit mornings. Opener choice matters more on this side of the Niagara River than it does in a warmer market.
716 Garage Doors installs and repairs openers across Tonawanda, North Tonawanda, and Kenmore. We size the motor to your door, not to a sales sheet.
Belt, Chain, or Screw: Picking the Right Drive
Three drive types cover most homes. A chain-drive opener costs the least and pulls heavy doors with ease, though it rattles loud enough to wake a bedroom above the garage. A belt-drive runs quiet and suits attached garages where noise carries into the house. Screw-drive openers use fewer parts and hold up well, yet they want steady lubrication to survive a Western New York cold snap.
Many Tonawanda homes from the 1940s and 1950s came with solid wood doors that weigh a ton. If you still have one, a half-horsepower motor will struggle on the lift. We pair these older doors with a three-quarter horsepower unit so the opener stops straining every time it pulls.
Battery Backup Earns Its Keep in a Storm
The power goes out here. A heavy snow band or an ice storm can drop a line for hours, and a manual release in the dark, in single digits, is nobody's idea of a good night. A battery backup keeps your opener running through an outage long enough to get the car out or get it parked. New York code now requires battery backup on residential openers, so any unit we install meets that standard from day one.
Smart Openers and the Phone in Your Pocket
You left for work and cannot remember whether the door closed. A smart opener answers that question from your phone. You check the status, close it from the office, and grant a delivery driver one-time access without handing out a code. These units connect to your home Wi-Fi and send an alert when the door opens at an odd hour. Parents of teenagers tend to value that feature more than the teenagers do.
Signs Yours Is About to Quit
Openers warn you before they die. Watch for a door that hesitates before it moves, a motor that grinds or hums without lifting, or a door that starts down and reverses for no reason. Cold weather exposes a weak capacitor first, so a unit that ran all summer can fail the first frigid week of December. A door that bangs at the top or bottom points to worn limit settings more than a dead motor, and that repair costs a fraction of a replacement.
Safety Sensors Are Not Optional
Every opener we install includes photo-eye sensors near the floor. They stop the door from closing on a kid, a pet, or the bumper of a car backing in. Salt spray and bumped brackets knock these sensors out of alignment over a Tonawanda winter, which is why a door that refuses to close has a dirty or crooked eye in most cases, not a broken board. We clean and realign them on every service call.
Repair or Replace
A ten-year-old opener with one failed part is worth fixing. Gears, sensors, and remotes are cheap and quick to swap. Once a unit passes fifteen years, parts grow scarce and the math tilts toward a fresh install with a quieter motor, a battery backup, and smart access built in. We tell you which side of that line your opener sits on, then let you decide.
Call 716 Garage Doors
We shovel out of the same snow you do. Whether your opener quit on the coldest morning of the year or you want an upgrade before the next storm rolls in, our team installs, repairs, and tunes openers throughout the Tonawanda area. Reach out for a straight answer and a fair quote.
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