The Science of Garage Door Springs: An Interactive Safety Guide
Ever wonder what’s really going on above your garage door? That tightly wound steel coil mounted on your wall quietly stores enough energy to lift a small car, and it does so thousands of times before it fails. When it does fail, things get dangerous fast.
We built an interactive guide that lets you see exactly how torsion springs work, how much force they store, and why they’re the one part of your garage door you should never touch yourself.
Explore the Interactive Spring Guide →
Why We Built This
Most homeowners don’t think about their garage door springs until something goes wrong: a loud bang in the middle of the night, a door that suddenly won’t open, or worse, an injury. We wanted to change that.
Understanding the forces within your spring system helps you recognize the warning signs before a failure occurs and, more importantly, understand why this repair should always be left to a trained professional.
What You’ll Learn
How Torsion Springs Actually Work
Your garage door doesn’t lift itself; a tightly wound coil of hardened steel wire does the heavy lifting. Our guide walks you through the complete anatomy of the system: the spring, the torsion shaft, cable drums, mounting brackets, and lift cables. Each component plays a critical role, and if any one of them fails under tension, the results can be catastrophic.


The Real Numbers Behind the Force
These aren’t abstract physics concepts. A standard residential torsion spring stores 200–300 joules of energy; more than a Major League fastball and more than a rolling bowling ball. The wire inside is stressed to nearly 200,000 PSI at full wind, which is right at the steel’s breaking point. Our energy comparison chart puts these numbers into perspective.


Interactive Winding Simulator
This is where it gets real. Drag the slider to wind the spring from 0 to 33 turns and watch the torque, stored energy, and wire stress climb in real time. You’ll see how the forces don’t build linearly; they accelerate as you approach maximum wind. The danger level indicator shifts from LOW to CRITICAL, and the spring visualization tightens and changes color as the stress increases.
This one surprises most people. The jump from 20 turns to 33 turns isn’t just “a little more force” — it’s exponentially more dangerous.


How Springs Kill and Maim
We don’t sugarcoat this section. Garage door spring injuries send thousands of people to the emergency room every year. Our guide covers the four most common failure scenarios:
- Spring Snap — Broken wire ends whip outward at 100+ mph, fast enough to embed in drywall or shatter a windshield
- Winding Bar Slip — A steel bar becomes a high-speed projectile powered by 30+ turns of stored energy
- Uncontrolled Door Drop — A 300+ lb door in free fall with nothing to counterbalance it
- Shaft Spin — The shaft spins at ~300 RPM instantly, catching anything in contact — fingers, clothing, hair


Every one of these has caused real, life-altering injuries.
The Cost of DIY vs. Hiring a Pro
Here’s the math that matters: professional spring replacement typically costs $150–$300. A single emergency room visit from a spring injury can run $5,000–$50,000 or more. The tools are specialized, the forces are extreme, and the margin for error is zero. This is one of the few home repairs where DIY is genuinely not worth the risk.


Try It Yourself
The full interactive guide is free and works on any device. Whether you’re a homeowner who wants to understand what’s happening above your garage door, or you just like seeing physics in action, it’s worth a few minutes of your time.
Explore the Science of Garage Door Springs →
Have questions about your springs, or think it might be time for a replacement? Call A Plus Garage Doors at (702) 297-7811 — we’re open 24 hours, 7 days a week. We’ll take a look and give you an honest assessment.







