Torsion vs. Extension Springs in Riverside, CA: Which One Does Your Door Actually Need?
For most Riverside homes — especially the two-car attached garages common across Orangecrest, Canyon Crest, and La Sierra — a torsion spring is the stronger, longer-lasting choice. Extension springs work fine on lighter single-car doors and tighter budget repairs, but in Riverside’s 105–112°F summer heat, torsion springs handle thermal stress and daily cycle wear significantly better. If your door is over 100 lbs or sees heavy daily use, torsion is the right call. Not sure which you have? Call us at (855) 512-3275 — Gary will tell you in plain terms what’s on your door and what it actually needs.
The Real Difference Between Torsion and Extension Springs
Both spring types do the same job: counterbalance the weight of your garage door so the opener motor (or your arm) doesn’t have to lift the full load. The mechanics, though, are completely different — and that difference matters for durability, safety, and what a repair will run you in Riverside.
Torsion springs mount horizontally above the door on a steel shaft. When the door closes, the spring winds up under tension. When it opens, it unwinds, transferring stored energy through the shaft and cables to lift the door smoothly. One or two springs handle the full weight from a single, central location.
Extension springs run along the horizontal tracks on either side of the door. They stretch — literally extend — as the door closes and contract to help lift it. Older designs, and a lot of what we still find on 1980s–1990s hardware in Riverside neighborhoods, use open-loop extension springs without containment cables. When one of those breaks, it can become a projectile.
| Feature | Torsion Spring | Extension Spring |
|---|---|---|
| Typical lifespan (cycles) | 15,000–20,000 | 8,000–10,000 |
| Failure mode | Unwinds, door stays down | Snaps, potential projectile risk |
| Repair cost in Riverside | $180–$340 | $180–$340 |
| Works best on | Heavy or wide doors (16-ft two-car) | Lighter single-car doors |
| Handles Riverside heat well? | Yes — wound steel resists thermal drift | Less so — coils fatigue faster under UV/heat cycling |
| Safety containment | Built into shaft design | Requires separate safety cables |
Why Riverside’s Climate Changes the Calculation
Riverside sits in CEC Climate Zone 10 — a verified inland heat pocket where summer temperatures regularly push 105–112°F, noticeably hotter than Los Angeles or San Diego. That heat doesn’t just make for uncomfortable afternoons. It accelerates the fatigue cycle on any spring steel that’s been in service for more than a decade.
Gary Murphy has been working garage doors in Riverside for over 20 years, and what he sees consistently in Orangecrest and Canyon Crest tells you something. Those neighborhoods are packed with late-1980s and early-1990s ranch-style homes that have west- or southwest-facing garages. The concrete driveway reflects radiant heat back up at the garage door all afternoon. Combined with direct UV exposure, torsion springs on those doors lose tension unevenly — one end fatigues faster than the other — and they snap at a rate that’s genuinely higher than what you’d expect from the same-age door in a shaded or coastal installation.
Extension springs on those same homes fare even worse. The coil geometry means more surface area exposed to heat cycling, and without safety cables (which most original 1970s–1980s installations lack), a failed extension spring is a safety event, not just a repair call.
The Santa Ana winds that funnel through the San Gorgonio Pass corridor east of Riverside add another variable. High lateral winds pack debris into tracks and put stress on door sections, and we see a predictable uptick in service calls after major Santa Ana events — often extension spring failures on lighter aluminum-section doors that flexed more than they should have.
Common Scenarios We See on Riverside Jobs
Not every spring failure looks the same. Here’s how this usually plays out on actual Riverside service calls:
- 1990s two-car in Orangecrest, original torsion spring: Door goes down overnight and won’t come back up. The spring has snapped clean — visible break in the coil. Replacement with a correctly rated torsion spring, properly wound and balanced, runs $180–$340 and is done same day.
- Single-car on a smaller La Sierra lot, extension springs: Door opens unevenly or jerks to one side. One extension spring has lost tension or broken. We replace both sides — always both, because the intact spring is at the same age and stress level — and add safety cables if they’re missing.
- Canyon Crest home converting from extension to torsion: Owner is on their third extension spring replacement in ten years and wants to be done with it. We swap in a torsion spring system with the correct drum and cable setup for the door weight. The upfront cost is higher than a like-for-like extension spring repair, but the math on a door that gets used twice a day for another decade usually favors the upgrade.
- Clopay or Wayne Dalton sectional with opener issues after a spring break: The LiftMaster or Genie opener didn’t cause the problem — the dead spring did. We fix the spring first, then test the opener under load. In about a third of these calls, the opener is fine once the door is balanced again.
If you’re sourcing hardware for a DIY-assist or need a specific part spec confirmed, our Garage Door Parts in Riverside page covers what we stock and what we can source.
For anything related to the full Garage Door Parts side of the job — cables, drums, end brackets — we carry the components to do the job completely, not piecemeal.
A Word on DIY Spring Work — Read This Before You Try It
Torsion springs operate under several hundred foot-pounds of stored tension. A spring that unwinds uncontrolled, or a winding bar that slips, can cause broken bones or worse — and this happens to people who’ve done it before, not just first-timers. Extension springs without containment cables can snap across a garage at speed.
We’re not saying this to manufacture a service call. We’re saying it because Gary’s seen the aftermath, and “I watched a YouTube video” is not adequate preparation for unwinding a spring under full tension. If you want to understand what’s on your door, look at it, measure it, and call us — we’ll walk you through what you have over the phone. The actual winding and replacement work is one of those jobs where the risk isn’t proportional to the savings.
If I can fix it in one trip, I will. If I can’t, I’ll tell you why before I touch anything.
Frequently Asked Questions
Spring repair in Riverside runs $180–$340 for either spring type, depending on door size, spring specs, and whether both springs need replacement. Torsion spring jobs on heavy two-car doors trend toward the higher end of that range because the spring itself is larger and proper balancing takes more time. Call (855) 512-3275 for a free estimate — we don’t charge to tell you what the job will cost.
Yes, and it’s a straightforward upgrade on most sectional doors built during Riverside’s 1970s–1990s housing boom. The conversion requires new drums, cables, and a torsion shaft sized for your door — plan on $250–$340 for the full switch on a standard two-car door. It’s worth doing if you’re replacing extension springs for the second or third time, especially on a west-facing garage taking full afternoon sun.
Standard torsion springs are rated for roughly 10,000 cycles, which translates to 7–10 years at two cycles per day under normal conditions. In Riverside’s Climate Zone 10 heat — particularly on west-facing garages in Orangecrest or Canyon Crest with heavy radiant heat off concrete — springs on 30-plus-year-old doors often fail sooner because the steel has been thermal-cycling for decades. High-cycle springs (rated to 20,000+ cycles) are worth the upcharge on any door that’s staying in service long-term.
No — with a broken torsion or extension spring, the door’s full weight falls on the opener, the cables, and whatever’s in the way. Operating the door risks damaging the opener motor, snapping a cable, or causing the door to fall. If one spring has broken, disconnect the opener and leave the door down until the spring is replaced. Call (855) 512-3275 for same-day service — this is exactly the kind of call we take as an emergency.
If you’d rather have it looked at than figure it out from a description, Sterling Garage Door Service Riverside offers a no-pressure, same-day assessment across Riverside. Gary shows up, looks at what you have, and tells you exactly what the door needs — no upsell on parts it doesn’t require. Call (855) 512-3275 for a free estimate.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner & Lead Technician at Sterling Garage Door Service Riverside, serving Riverside, CA.