JOIN NOW LOG IN
iVillage GardenWeb iVillage GardenWeb THE INTERNET'S GARDEN & HOME COMMUNITY ADVERTISEMENT
Blogs Forums Photo Galleries Ask The Experts Tools & Directories        
Return to the Tool Shed Forum | Post a Follow-Up

 o
Craftsman Garage Door Opener

Posted by jerjones1 (My Page) on
Tue, Oct 20, 09 at 9:21

Hi,

I have a 1/2hp Craftsman Garage Door Opener. I went to close it last night and it wend down about 3/4 of the way and stopped yet the motor sounded like it was still running. I tried to open it and watched the sprocket and it wasn't turning and the chain wasn't moving. I don't have the owners manual since it was already there when I bought the house. I thought I saw a yellow light blink but am not sure. Any ideas what could be wrong with it?? thanks

Jeremy


Follow-Up Postings:

 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

Take the cover off and look at the drive gear. It is white nylon and is just in front of the motor. Most likely stripped. It is available at Sears or any good opener service company and comes with instructions. The part number if 41A2817.


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

Congratulations. You own the worst garage door opener ever made.
Cut your losses and chunk the Craftsman garage door opener. Get a Genie and you will never post a question about openers on this forum again. A little research on this forum will show you hundreds of posts about those badly engineered and cheaply produced monsters. There are probably more questions about them than anything else on this forum. I recommend the Genie "Excelerator". Opens twice as fast, quiet, has two lights, and extremely reliable.


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

Two Crapsman OH door openers were on my garage when I bought the house. When one crapped-out in '97, I called the Sears tech who replaced a circuit board for 100.00 - yikes! What was I thinking?

I still have that repaired one - just waiting for it to have a second death so I can replace it with the Genie I bought to replace the second unit which stopped working a year later.

I swear it's a Sears conspiracy for planned obsolescence. :^)


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

Don, That was exactly it. I got the parts pretty cheaply had not trouble at all installing them and everything seemed to be fine. Now I'm having trouble with the door getting almost all the way closed and then going back up. I adjusted the limits and those are fine because occasionally it closes. Most times not. I also adjusted the down force as much as it would go. and the sensors are fine. It looks to be binding right at the end. anyone run into this or have a suggestion?


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

You thought I was kidding didn't you? Just go on and keep buying stuff for that Craftsman Garage Door Opener. Before you know it the parts cost will exceed the cost of a new one not to mention the headaches. Just when you really need it to work it will fail....on a weekend.


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

rdaystrom why don't you go find a sandbox to play in.

jerjones here are some tips to try.

Make sure you put the black cup back on the end of the motor shaft and that it is pressed all the way on. Make sure the RPM sensor is plugged in. If neither of these are the issue, then you probably did not have the motor shaft pushed all the way back when you tightened the coupler after replacing the worm gear. Loosen that coupler up and from the front of the motor (opposite end in which the coupler is on) push the shaft back as far as it will go. Hold it there while you tighten the coupler back up and then try it.


 o
RE: Craftsman Garage Door Opener

don_1_2006, Save your childish remarks for someone else. It's too bad you can't recognize one of the worst engineered machines on the market. The Sears Craftsman line of garage door openers. The most failure prone pieces of junk ever built. Perhaps you do not have the experience or have not seen as many Craftsman Garage door opener failures as I have. To those readers out there who wish to eliminate this headache from their lives, just replace the thing before you spend more money and time on a machine that was built with failure in mind. This type of design creates a huge replacement parts market for Sears. They can make massive profits on replacement parts with a captive market. Buy a Genie opener and you will not be posting questions here anymore about Garage door openers.


 o Post a Follow-Up

Please Note: Only registered members are able to post messages to this forum.

    If you are a member, please log in.

    If you aren't yet a member, join now!


Return to the Tool Shed Forum
 
 


iVillage GardenWeb: The Internet's Garden & Home Community  
  iVillage Home & Garden Network