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Garage Door Opener Not Working
in Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado Springs gets strong afternoon thunderstorms in July and August that send power surges through home wiring. Those surges damage garage door opener logic boards, and many homeowners do not realize that is what happened. Older openers installed in the 1990s are especially vulnerable because they lack the surge protection built into newer units.
Quick Answer
A garage door opener that stops working is usually caused by a dead remote battery, a tripped circuit breaker, or a logic board failure. Colorado Springs power surges during summer thunderstorms can fry opener circuit boards without warning. Start with the basics: check the outlet, reset the breaker, and replace the remote battery. If none of that fixes it, call for an inspection because the motor or board may need replacement.
Telltale Signs
Warning Signs to Watch For
- The opener light comes on but the door does not move
- Neither the wall button nor the remote triggers any response
- The opener unit makes a clicking or humming sound but stops immediately
- The remote works only when held very close to the opener unit
- The door reverses immediately after starting to close
- The opener worked fine yesterday and nothing visible has changed
Root Causes
What Causes Garage Door Opener Not Working?
Power Surge or Outage Damage
Summer thunderstorms roll through Colorado Springs fast and send voltage spikes through the electrical system before a surge protector can react. The logic board inside the opener is sensitive, and a single spike can burn out the circuit that interprets remote and wall-button signals.
The Fix
Logic Board Replacement
A technician tests the board with a diagnostic tool and replaces it if it is burned out. Adding a dedicated surge protector to the opener outlet prevents the same damage from the next storm.
Failed Remote or Receiver
Remote batteries drain faster in cold weather because cold reduces battery capacity. In Colorado Springs winters, a remote that worked fine in October may stop reaching the opener by December simply because the battery is delivering less power in the cold.
The Fix
Remote Battery Replacement or Receiver Reprogramming
Swapping in a fresh battery fixes most remote failures. If the remote still does not work after that, a technician can reprogram the remote to the opener or replace the receiver antenna wire if it was damaged.
Worn or Burned-Out Motor
Opener motors are rated for a certain number of cycles. Homes in neighborhoods like Briargate or Northgate with three-car garages tend to cycle openers far more often than average, and a motor in daily heavy use can burn out well before the opener reaches 15 years of age.
The Fix
Opener Motor Replacement
A technician confirms motor failure by testing the board and capacitor first. If the motor is the problem, replacing just the motor is sometimes possible, though on older units replacing the full opener unit is often the more practical choice.
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 | Power Surge or Outage Damage | Failed Remote or Receiver | Worn or Burned-Out Motor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Opener stopped working the day after a bad thunderstorm | |||
| Remote requires pressing multiple times or very close range | |||
| Wall button does not work either, not just the remote | |||
| Opener hums briefly then goes silent with no movement | |||
| Opener is more than 12 years old and in a high-use garage |
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