Garage Door Spring Calculator
Use our free Garage Door Spring Calculator to quickly estimate the torque each spring must supply, the approximate spring rate, and the number of turns required based on inputs like door weight, cable drum radius, and number of springs. Perfect for garage door technicians, installers, and informed homeowners. Always verify specs with spring manufacturers and follow safe installation practice.
Get StartedDoor Specifications
Door weight must be 1-1500 lbs.
Door height must be 1-12 ft.
Drum size must be positive.
Calculation Results
Recommended Spring Length
0 in
Required Torque
0 in-lbs
Number of Turns
0
Estimated Cycles
0
Safety Factor
0
Engineering estimate. Verify final spring selection with manufacturer tables and a qualified installer.
All calculations are estimates and should be verified by a professional.
Garage Door Spring Formula
Start from the door weight and drum radius to compute torque required. Use spring geometry + material to estimate spring rate k then compute turns = torque ÷ k. Real-world spring specs are provided by manufacturers (wire gauge, coil diameter, active coils, free length); this calculator estimates values for selection and setup. Always verify with supplier curves and local codes.
How this garage door spring calculator works
The calculator converts the door weight into torque required at the cable drum, divides the torque across the number of installed springs, and then uses spring geometry and material properties to estimate the torsion spring rate (torque per turn). From that rate it estimates how many turns are needed to balance the door. This gives installers a quick verification before ordering springs or making adjustments. For safety and warranty reasons, final sizing and installation must use manufacturer tables and professional installers.
When to use this garage door spring calculator
When ordering replacement torsion springs to match door weight and drum size
To estimate initial wind turns when setting up a new spring installation
For cross-checking supplier spring codes vs. calculated torque/turns
During training or planning for balanced door performance and cycle life
When confirming that a door is within a spring's rated torque capacity
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Book a Free DemoTypical Torsion Spring Ranges & Notes
Common practical guidance for quick checks—always validate with supplier tables:
Typical drum radius
1.5–2.5 in (larger drums change required torque)
Common turns at install
4–12 turns per spring for residential doors (depends on door height and drum)
Typical spring rates (order of magnitude)
10–40 in·lb per turn depending on wire and diameter
Wire sizes
residential springs commonly use wire diameters from 0.175" to 0.300" depending on door weight and cycles
Cycle life vs. spring geometry
thicker wire and larger diameter springs generally increase torque capacity but change cycle life trade-offs
Use these ranges to check whether a candidate spring code is plausible. Final selection must be confirmed with manufacturer specs and load testing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is this garage door spring calculator?
It provides engineering-based estimates. Final spring selection and safe installation require manufacturer tables and a trained installer.
How many turns do most residential springs need?
Many residential doors use roughly 4–12 turns per spring at installation, depending on door height and drum diameter.
Can I adjust a spring by myself?
No—torsion springs store dangerous energy. Adjustment or replacement should only be performed by trained professionals with appropriate tools.
What if my door has extension springs (not torsion)?
This tool focuses on torsion spring setups (shaft + drums). Extension springs use different balancing calculations and safety requirements.
Why do manufacturers provide spring codes instead of my calculated values?
Manufacturers publish tested spring codes (wire, diameter, coils, free length) and load curves that are safer and more precise than raw calculations—use their tables to pick a match.
Does drum radius change the result a lot?
Yes—larger drum radius increases mechanical advantage and reduces required spring turns for the same door weight (but changes cable wrap and travel). Always measure the effective drum radius.
What inputs give the biggest uncertainty?
Wire diameter, mean coil diameter, and accurate active coil count (N) are most sensitive; material G may vary slightly. Use supplier data for precise k.
Can this calculator help with cycle-life planning?
It helps estimate torque and spring load, which inform cycle-life trade-offs, but cycle-life depends on material heat treatment, shot-peening, and manufacturing—use supplier cycle ratings for planning.