Fast, Reliable Garage Door Parts Across Upper Arlington
Garage door parts in Upper Arlington typically cost $110–$340 for common replacements like rollers, cables, and torsion springs, with most jobs completed same-day once the right hardware is on the truck. Because Upper Arlington’s 1930s–1960s housing stock uses non-standard track systems and narrow single-car bays, parts must often be custom-measured rather than pulled from standard inventory.

We’ve been turning wrenches on Upper Arlington garage doors for two decades. From the Colonial Revivals lining Ridgeview Middle School’s surrounding streets to the Cape Cods tucked behind Lane Avenue’s commercial corridor, we’ve learned that “standard” rarely applies here. Steven Ramirez, our owner and lead technician, carries low-headroom conversion kits and custom-sized torsion springs because the 8-foot single-car bays on Nottingham Road and the alley-loaded garages off Cheltenham Road demand hardware that big-box franchises don’t stock. When your spring snaps at 6 a.m. or your cables fray on a Sunday, we’re the Garage Door Parts crew that shows up with the actual parts your door needs — not a return-trip promise. Call (877) 502-2559.
Why Empire Garage Door Installation Columbus Is Upper Arlington’s Preferred Garage Door Parts Company
Upper Arlington homeowners know the difference between a technician who reads a model number and one who’s crawled through enough legacy garages to recognize a 1950s Wayne Dalton track system by sight. Steven Ramirez has spent 20 years in the garage door trade, and nearly 800 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars back up what locals already know: we diagnose honestly, stock what’s needed, and don’t disappear when the job gets complicated.
Our response time to Upper Arlington averages under 45 minutes from call to arrival — critical when a snapped torsion spring has your car trapped on a workday morning. We’ve replaced springs on Fairway Drive, realigned tracks in the Ridgeview area, and retrofitted low-headroom systems in the alley-loaded garages behind Tremont Road shops. That local fluency means we bring the right parts the first time, not a guess that costs you another day off work.
Unlike franchise operations that send whoever’s available, Steven personally handles every Upper Arlington call. He’s certified on all eight major brands — Amarr, Wayne Dalton, Craftsman, Raynor, and four others — so “we don’t work on that” isn’t in our vocabulary. When your door can’t wait, emergency garage door service is available.
Our Garage Door Parts Services in Upper Arlington
Torsion Spring Replacement
Torsion spring replacement in Upper Arlington runs $180–$340, with most of that variance coming from spring length, wire gauge, and whether your 1950s–1960s door needs a custom-sized replacement. Original torsion springs on Upper Arlington’s legacy doors snap at high rates during Columbus’s late-January freeze-thaw cycles — we’ve seen temperatures swing from 8°F to 42°F in a single week, and that metal fatigue doesn’t negotiate. We measure your existing spring on-site, calculate the correct IPPT (inch-pounds per turn) for your door weight, and install a cycle-rated replacement that outlasts the original.
Extension Spring Systems
Extension springs remain common on the lighter wood-paneled doors found in Upper Arlington’s pre-1965 housing stock, particularly on the single-car detached garages near Ridgeview Middle School. These springs stretch and contract along the horizontal track, and when they snap, they can damage the door or injure anyone nearby. We replace extension springs in matched pairs — never singly — and always install safety cables through the spring center to contain a future failure. For Upper Arlington’s original wood doors that have been retrofitted with heavier modern openers, we often recommend converting to a torsion system for safer, smoother operation.
Cables & Drums
Cable repair in Upper Arlington costs $130–$250 and addresses one of the most dangerous failure modes we see. Lift cables wrap around the torsion drum and bear the full door weight; when they fray or snap, the door can drop uncontrolled. Road salt tracked in from Upper Arlington’s well-maintained winter roads accelerates cable corrosion at the bottom bracket, particularly on alley-accessed garages where snow and slush accumulate. We use galvanized or stainless-steel replacement cables rated for your door’s weight, and we always inspect the drums for scoring or wear — a damaged drum will destroy a new cable in months.
Rollers & Hinges
Roller replacement in Upper Arlington runs $110–$220 for a full set, and it’s often the most transformative upgrade for a sticky, noisy door. Original steel rollers on 1950s–1960s Upper Arlington doors seize in their tracks after decades of road-salt corrosion and freeze-thaw cycling. We stock 2-inch and 3-inch nylon rollers with sealed bearings for quieter operation, plus heavy-duty ball-bearing steel rollers for heavier wood doors. Hinges get inspected for elongation at the bolt holes — a common failure on legacy doors that have been forced open with a failing opener — and we carry 14-gauge replacements that match original hole spacing.
Weatherstripping & Bottom Seal
Upper Arlington’s wind exposure across the relatively flat Scioto River valley drives debris and moisture under poorly sealed doors, and original rubber seals on 1960s doors have long since hardened and cracked. We install vinyl or rubber bottom seals with integrated aluminum retainers, plus PVC or brush-style jamb seals for the sides. For the carriage-house-style doors that Upper Arlington’s architectural standards often require, we source seals that maintain the aesthetic while blocking the drafts that spike winter heating bills.

What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Upper Arlington
We work on your brand — period. Steven Ramirez is certified to service all major residential garage door manufacturers, and we maintain parts inventory for Amarr, Wayne Dalton, Craftsman, and Raynor systems commonly found in Upper Arlington’s established neighborhoods. Amarr’s Classica collection and Wayne Dalton’s carriage-house models appear frequently in Upper Arlington’s architecturally sensitive renovations, where the city’s appearance standards require historically compatible styling. We stock torsion springs, cables, and hardware kits sized for these brands’ non-standard door widths, and our supplier relationships mean we can source discontinued parts for 1990s Craftsman openers still running in Fairway Drive basements. Fast turnaround matters when your car is stuck inside — we don’t order-and-wait when a local solution exists.
Common Garage Door Parts Problems We See in Upper Arlington Homes
- Original torsion springs snap during January freeze-thaw cycles. The 1950s–60s springs on Upper Arlington’s legacy doors were never designed for Columbus’s modern temperature volatility. We’ve replaced springs on Nottingham Road homes where the original had lasted 60 years, then failed twice in three winters as climate patterns shifted.
- Road salt corrodes bottom brackets and rollers on alley-loaded garages. Upper Arlington’s aggressive winter road maintenance keeps streets safe, but that salt gets tracked into narrow alleys and eats steel hardware. We regularly find bottom brackets reduced to flaky orange dust on Cheltenham Road-area garages.
- Low-headroom garages force standard parts to fail. With 6–8 inches of headroom clearance on many alley-accessed lots, standard torsion hardware won’t fit and standard springs won’t cycle properly. Technicians without local experience show up, attempt installation, and leave with the job half-done. We’ve learned to measure headroom before we load the truck.
- 1990s openers on original doors create mismatched strain. A heavy modern Craftsman or Chamberlain opener on a 1960s wood door with original hinges and rollers accelerates wear across every component. We evaluate the full system — not just the failed part — to prevent the callback that costs you another morning.
Pricing for Garage Door Parts in Upper Arlington, OH
Here’s what typical garage door parts replacements cost in Upper Arlington’s market:
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Torsion Spring Replacement | $180–$340 |
| Cable Repair | $130–$250 |
| Roller Replacement | $110–$220 |
Your final cost depends on door size, hardware accessibility, and whether your Upper Arlington garage requires custom sizing or low-headroom conversion components. A standard 16-foot door in a modern subdivision might hit the low end; a 1950s 8-foot single-car bay with minimal side room and original wood construction typically runs higher. We provide free estimates — call (877) 502-2559 — and we don’t start work until you know the exact price. No upsells, no “while we’re here” pressure. Just the parts your door needs, installed by the person who measured it.
We Also Serve Cities Near Upper Arlington
Our parts inventory and local knowledge extend throughout the near-west Columbus corridor. We regularly service garage door parts needs in Grandview Heights, where the compact lots create similar access challenges; Columbus proper, from Clintonville to the Short North; Lincoln Village, with its mid-century ranch stock; and Hilliard, where newer subdivisions contrast sharply with Upper Arlington’s legacy housing. Same-day parts availability, same personal service from Steven Ramirez.
Serving Upper Arlington, OH — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Upper Arlington area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Garage Door Parts in Upper Arlington
Replace just the springs if the wood panels are structurally sound and the track system is intact; plan for full door replacement if panels are rotted, warped, or the track is non-standard and can’t be safely retrofitted. In Upper Arlington, we’ve found that original wood doors on Nottingham Road and Fairway Drive often outlast three spring cycles if kept painted and the bottom seal maintained. However, when the track itself is a discontinued 1950s configuration with no modern roller compatibility, a new insulated steel or composite door with standard hardware becomes the more economical long-term choice. New door installation runs $700–$2,200 versus $180–$340 for springs alone. Call (877) 502-2559 and Steven will assess whether your door has another decade in it.
Sometimes, but only if your existing track is a low-headroom or quick-turn configuration compatible with the new opener’s rail system; otherwise, the track must be modified or replaced for safe operation. Upper Arlington’s alley garages with 6–8 inches of clearance typically need low-headroom bracket kits or a wall-mount jackshaft opener that eliminates the overhead rail entirely. We’ve installed LiftMaster 8500W jackshaft units on Cheltenham Road properties where standard rail systems simply wouldn’t fit. The opener installation runs $250–$550, with jackshaft models at the higher end. We’ll measure your headroom and side room before recommending anything — call for a free evaluation.
Road salt from Columbus’s winter maintenance program accelerates corrosion on steel rollers, particularly on alley-accessed garages where snow and slush accumulate and melt slowly. Upper Arlington’s location on heavy salt routes — maintained for the commuter traffic to downtown Columbus — means more corrosive material reaches your driveway than in outlying areas. We replace rust-prone steel rollers with sealed-bearing nylon or stainless-steel alternatives that resist this environment. If you’re replacing rollers annually, you’re using the wrong grade for local conditions. A full set runs $110–$220 installed. Call (877) 502-2559 for an exact quote — estimates are free.
Replacement panels for 1960s Canyon Creek doors are rarely available new; discontinued models typically require full door replacement or custom panel fabrication that exceeds replacement cost. Canyon Creek (a regional manufacturer absorbed into larger brands) used proprietary panel profiles and colors that haven’t been produced in decades. We’ve sourced salvage panels for Upper Arlington historic renovations, but matching faded paint and weathered grain is nearly impossible. For a door with single-panel damage, we evaluate whether a structural repair and cosmetic refinishing can extend service life; for multiple failed panels, new door installation at $700–$2,200 is usually the practical path. Call (877) 502-2559 — Steven can assess your specific model and options.
Often yes — 1990s Craftsman openers are mechanically simple and parts remain available, though the reversing issue usually indicates failed safety sensors, worn drive gears, or misaligned limit switches rather than a fatal failure. In Upper Arlington’s older garages, we’ve found that original 1990s Craftsman units outlasted their expected lifespan because they were underpowered for heavy wood doors and thus never worked hard. The reversing behavior is a safety feature malfunction, not a motor failure. Opener repair runs $120–$320; if the rail is bent or the logic board is damaged, replacement at $250–$550 may be smarter. We’ll diagnose honestly — call (877) 502-2559 for same-day service.
Written by Steven Ramirez, Owner at Empire Garage Door Installation Columbus, serving Upper Arlington and Columbus since 2004.