I locked myself out of my detached garage. The remote to open it no longer works.

It’s a really old garage and the opener is from 1999.

Trying to lift it obviously doesnt work. There’s an emergency release you can activate with a key, but the keyhole is crammed full of old hard metallic paint that I can’t get out.

Anything else I can do? Or do I have do smash the thing down?

  • deejay4am@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This isn’t usually true, as a power-outage could trap a vehicle inside without a manual release. This is usually a little rope hanging from the connecting latch on the motor chain or screw-traveler.

    If there wasn’t a spring to help lift the door open then the manual release would at best do very little to help you open the door, or at worst send it crashing down uncontrollably if you released it while the door was open.

    Trust me, it’s got a spring.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, there’s a spring. Those motors don’t have the power to lift it without the spring, at least the one at my dad’s place didn’t have enough power when that spring went.

      • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Quick google. Here’s an example of a small and relatively affordable motor you can buy:

        https://hurricaneshutters.com/100nm-roll-shutter-motor

        Max carrying capacity is 400lbs/200kg.

        Some of the more powerful ones, you can basically hang on to the door as it’s opening.

        Heavy duty industrial ones? Metro stations where I live automatically open. On more than one occassion a homeless person makes the mistake of tampering with the metal roll down shutters come opening time. They get caught, motor keeps going, drags them into the mechanism and partially crushes them.

    • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’ve come across plenty without a manual release. No rope.

      And yes, without a manual release you can’t easily open it manually while the power’s off. You need to overcome gravity and the motor. Forklift or a jack is the easiest way.

      Direct drive stops it falling down uncontrollably.