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Garage Door Cable Snapped or Fraying
in Santa Clarita, CA

Garage door lift cables are the steel wires that connect the spring system to the bottom corners of the door. They bear real weight every time the door moves. In Santa Clarita, the dry air is generally good for metal, but homes in the Placerita Canyon and Towsley Canyon areas see enough morning moisture to start rust on cables that have never been maintained. A snapped cable is a safety issue, not a minor inconvenience.

Quick Answer

Lift cables work with the springs to hold the door's weight and keep it balanced. When a cable snaps or frays badly, the door can drop fast and hard on one side. This is one of the more dangerous garage door failures. In Santa Clarita, cables rust faster on homes near the hills where morning fog occasionally settles. Do not use the door if you see fraying. Call (661) 593-4003 right away.

Garage Door Cable Snapped or Fraying in Santa Clarita

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • The door hangs noticeably lower on one side when stopped
  • You can see individual wire strands broken away from the main cable
  • The door drops hard and fast instead of lowering smoothly
  • One side of the door is slack while the other is tight
  • Orange rust streaks appear along the cable length
  • The cable has come off the drum at the top of the door frame

Root Causes

What Causes Garage Door Cable Snapped or Fraying?

1

Rust and Corrosion on Cables

Steel lift cables are made of twisted wire strands. When rust gets into the cable, it weakens individual strands one at a time until the cable can no longer hold the load and snaps. Homes near the hills north of Santa Clarita see morning dew and occasional fog that settles on unprotected cable long enough to start the rust process.

The Fix

Cable Replacement with Rust-Inhibiting Treatment

Both cables are replaced at the same time, even if only one has failed, because they wear together. The new cables are wiped with a rust-inhibiting product during installation. This is always done with the spring tension released by a trained technician.

2

Cable Drum Misalignment

The cable wraps onto a round drum at the top of the door on each side. If the drum is not aligned properly, the cable winds unevenly and piles up on one edge of the drum, cutting into itself under load. This causes fraying that looks like wear but is actually caused by mechanical damage happening every single cycle.

The Fix

Drum Realignment and Cable Replacement

The drum is repositioned on the torsion bar so the cable wraps in clean, even layers. The damaged cable is replaced at the same time. A straight wind prevents the self-cutting problem from repeating.

3

Normal Cycle Fatigue

Like springs, cables have a finite lifespan measured in cycles. In busy Santa Clarita households where the garage is the primary entry point and the door opens and closes six or more times a day, cables can reach the end of their usable life in less than ten years. The wires simply fatigue and begin breaking strand by strand.

The Fix

Scheduled Cable Replacement

Cables that show any fraying are replaced before they snap. Replacing them on a schedule, rather than waiting for failure, avoids the sudden drop risk entirely. A technician can estimate remaining cable life during a standard inspection.

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 Corrosion on Cables Cable Drum Misalignment Normal Cycle Fatigue
Orange rust streaks along the cable length
Cable fraying where it contacts the drum edge
Cable fraying evenly at multiple points along its length
Door drops on one side suddenly
Cable wound in a messy pile on one side of the drum
Door is over ten years old with no prior cable service