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Garage Door Opener Not Working
in Boise, ID
Garage door openers are electric motors with a small logic board that controls everything. Boise gets real thunderstorms in late spring and summer, and the power spikes that come with them kill opener circuit boards more often than most homeowners expect. If your opener is more than 15 years old, parts are often no longer made for it.
Quick Answer
A garage door opener that won't work usually has one of three problems: a dead remote, a tripped safety sensor, or a failed motor unit. In Boise, power surges during summer thunderstorms frequently fry opener circuit boards. Start with fresh remote batteries and check that nothing is blocking the safety sensors near the floor. If neither fixes it, a technician can diagnose whether the board or motor needs replacing.
Telltale Signs
Warning Signs to Watch For
- The wall button does nothing and the opener light doesn't come on
- The opener motor hums or runs for a second but the door doesn't move
- The remote stopped working but the wall button still works
- The door reverses immediately after touching the ground instead of closing fully
- The opener light blinks a specific number of times in a pattern
- The door opens fine but won't close with the remote or button
Root Causes
What Causes Garage Door Opener Not Working?
Power surge burning out circuit board
Boise thunderstorms between May and August regularly cause voltage spikes on residential power lines. A spike runs through the opener's power cord and destroys the logic board that controls motor direction, limits, and safety functions.
The Fix
Circuit Board Replacement
A technician swaps the burned board for a replacement matched to your opener model. Adding a surge protector to the outlet the opener plugs into helps prevent the same damage from happening again.
Safety sensor misalignment or obstruction
Every garage door opener made after 1993 has two sensors near the floor that shoot an invisible beam across the door opening. Dust, a misaligned bracket, or something sitting in front of a sensor breaks that beam and the opener refuses to close the door.
The Fix
Sensor Realignment and Cleaning
A technician realigns both sensor brackets so the indicator lights on each unit glow solid, then cleans the lenses. If a sensor was knocked and the wire inside broke, the sensor unit itself needs replacing.
Failed motor or drive mechanism
Openers in Boise garages that are not climate-controlled run their motors in temperatures that swing from over 100°F in August to near zero in January. That thermal stress wears out motor brushes and strips plastic drive gears faster than the manufacturer's typical estimates.
The Fix
Motor Unit or Drive Gear Replacement
A technician opens the motor housing and inspects the drive gear and motor. Stripped plastic gears are a common and relatively straightforward fix. A fully burned motor usually means replacing the entire opener head unit.
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 burning out circuit board | Safety sensor misalignment or obstruction | Failed motor or drive mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wall button and remote both do nothing, no lights | |||
| Door refuses to close and sensor light is blinking or off | |||
| Problem started right after a thunderstorm | |||
| Motor runs but door doesn't move and grinding is audible | |||
| Remote doesn't work but wall button works fine | |||
| Door reverses before fully closing |
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