Santa Clarita Garage Door Pros

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Garage Door Won't Close All the Way
in Santa Clarita, CA

When a garage door stops a foot off the ground and reverses, your garage is open to the weather, dust, and anything small enough to walk under it. In Santa Clarita, that includes the fine dust that blows in from the high desert, as well as rodents that take advantage of any opening they can find. This problem almost never fixes itself.

Quick Answer

A garage door that won't fully close is usually caused by misaligned sensors, a bad close-limit setting, or something in the door's path. Santa Clarita's sandy, dusty air can coat sensor lenses and fool the system into thinking there's an obstruction. Clean the sensors first. If that doesn't fix it, call (661) 593-4003 so a technician can check the limit settings and safety system.

Garage Door Won't Close All the Way in Santa Clarita

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • The door descends most of the way and then reverses back up
  • The door stops at the same spot every time, well above the floor
  • The close button on the wall works differently than the remote
  • A flashing light on the opener signals a sensor or obstruction warning
  • There is a visible gap under the door when it is in the closed position
  • The door closes fine in the morning but not in the afternoon

Root Causes

What Causes Garage Door Won't Close All the Way?

1

Blocked or Dirty Safety Sensors

Sensors near the floor send a beam across the door opening. If anything, including a thick layer of dust on the lens, breaks the beam, the opener stops and reverses. Santa Clarita's dry, windy conditions mean fine dust builds up fast, and sensor lenses can get coated within weeks in a dusty garage near Agua Dulce or Acton.

The Fix

Sensor Cleaning and Realignment

The technician cleans both sensor lenses with a dry cloth and re-checks the alignment. Both indicator lights should glow solid after the fix. A quick test run confirms the door closes fully.

2

Incorrect Close Limit Setting

The close limit is a setting that tells the opener how far down to travel. If this setting is off, the opener stops short and may even treat the floor as an obstruction and reverse. This often drifts out of adjustment on openers more than ten years old, especially after any power loss.

The Fix

Close Limit Adjustment

The technician adjusts the close limit screw or digital setting on the opener unit until the door reaches the floor and the bottom seal compresses evenly. This is a small adjustment that takes a few minutes but needs to be done precisely.

3

Damaged or Uneven Floor Contact

Concrete slab floors in Santa Clarita homes can develop slight humps or low spots over time as the ground shifts during dry spells. If the door hits a high point in the floor before the limit setting says it should stop, the opener reads extra resistance and reverses to avoid damage.

The Fix

Bottom Seal Adjustment or Floor Transition Strip

The technician adjusts the door's down-force setting so it can handle the slight variation in floor level. A rubber or vinyl threshold strip can also be added to bridge a low spot and create a consistent seal.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Blocked or Dirty Safety Sensors Incorrect Close Limit Setting Damaged or Uneven Floor Contact
Sensor light on one side is blinking amber
Door stops at the same height every time with no obstruction visible
Door reverses immediately on contact with the floor in one spot
Problem is worse on windy or dusty days
Problem started after a power outage
Visible gap under door is worse on one side than the other