This works ! but also if done carelessly or not paying attention one slip can easily break you're armI use two pieces of rebar to accomplish the task..
We've all heard this and I think it was made up by installers to get more business. Agree there's stored energy in a wound up spring and one of the winding rods could give you a good hard hit if it rotated 180 degrees before it hit but I can't figure out how someone could have it happen. I've replaced 3 sets of torsion springs and you have to be deliberate and pay attention but it isn't sketchy or feel dangerous. Online sources mention broken limbs and concussions, more likely caused by falling off the ladder if the winding bar slips and the commotion scares the DIYer IMO. I had to replace the springs on a 5 year old door and they came with nice plated rods with plastidip handles. Kept the springs lubed from new and the tension was correct so it was a flawed spring.This works ! but also if done carelessly or not paying attention one slip can easily break you're arm
Thanks for the info. they were asking $300 for the tool and it sold. Such an interesting and specialized tool.Former garage door installer here, and I worked for the man that designed that tool in the 1970's. It may take a pro 5 minutes to wind a residential torsion spring, but that tool is for the commercial market. Try winding an 8 inch diameter spring assembly with 4 springs on a 16 foot tall door with winding bars off an extension ladder and you'll wish you had that machine.
Same here. I just wanted to say don't do this task if you are tired, rushed, or in a bad mood.I use two pieces of rebar to accomplish the task..
Ignorance has a price.This works ! but also if done carelessly or not paying attention one slip can easily break you're arm
I couldn't tell you how many were produced, he ran that company separate from the door company and I didn't stay in that industry very long.Great first person knowledge b4autodark, thanks for sharing. How many were produced?