Homeowner pulling the red garage door emergency release cord, with safety steps — CallOrange Garage Door Repair, Tempe AZ

Stuck Inside? How to Use Your Garage Door Emergency Release Cord Safely

The garage door emergency release cord is the bright red rope hanging from your opener’s rail, and it exists for a single purpose: to disconnect the door from the motor so you can raise or lower it by hand when the power is out or the opener quits. Used correctly, it takes seconds. Used at the wrong moment, it can let a heavy door fall.

A summer storm knocks the power out across your Tempe neighborhood, the opener falls silent, and your car is trapped behind a door that won’t budge — with somewhere you need to be. That exact scenario is what the garage door emergency release cord was built for, and pulling it safely is far simpler than most homeowners expect. At CallOrange Garage Door Repair, we’ve coached thousands of Valley households through this moment since 2008. We’ll show you what the red handle actually does, when it’s safe to use, and the one situation where pulling it can cause real harm. If you’d rather have help on the way while you read, you can find our Tempe location on Google Maps.

Garage Door Emergency Release Cord: What It Is and Why Every Door Has One

The garage door emergency release cord is a short rope with a red handle connected to the trolley — the carriage that travels along your opener’s rail and pushes the door up and down. Pulling the handle trips a spring-loaded lever that separates the door’s arm from that trolley, switching the door from powered operation to manual. Once disconnected, the door is no longer held by the motor; it’s held only by its springs, which is exactly why understanding the system before you tug on anything matters.

Every automatic opener sold in the United States — whether it’s a LiftMaster, Chamberlain, or Genie — ships with this release by federal design standard. It’s the same mechanism whether you own a chain-drive unit from the 1990s or a Wi-Fi model wired into your smart home integration. Our factory-trained technicians work with all of them, and the release operates on the same principle across the board.

Where to Find It on Your System

Look up at the rail running from the wall or ceiling motor toward the door. The red handle hangs from a small trolley roughly in the center of that rail. In most homes it dangles six to seven feet off the ground — high enough that it isn’t an everyday object, low enough to reach without a ladder. If you’ve never noticed it, you’re in good company; many of the homeowners who call our garage door service team are surprised it was there all along.

Why Building Codes Require It

The release exists for safety, not convenience. If anyone is ever trapped inside a garage during a fire or power loss, that cord is the manual override that gets the door open. It also protects the opener motor itself — forcing a powered door open or closed can strip the gears and burn out the unit. Knowing how to disengage it cleanly is part of basic home ownership, much like knowing where your water shutoff valve is.

When the Emergency Release Cord Helps — and When to Stop

Situation Safe to Use the Cord? What to Do
Power outage, door looks normal ✓ Yes Release, operate by hand, re-latch when power returns
Opener motor dead, door sits level ✓ Yes Use the cord, then schedule an opener repair
Remote or keypad not responding ✓ Yes Use the cord; check batteries and the opener
Door stuck open, but looks normal ✓ With care Support the door, release, lower it gently
Loud bang, door now crooked or very heavy ✗ No Likely a broken spring — call a professional
Door has come off the track / leaning ✗ No Don’t pull the cord — call a professional
Frayed, loose, or hanging cable ✗ No Stop — cable is under tension; call a pro
Bent panels, hardware, or rollers ✗ No Have it inspected before operating the door

When to Pull the Cord — and the One Time You Shouldn’t

Most of the time, the garage door emergency release cord is exactly the right tool. Reach for it confidently when the power is out, when the opener has died but the door itself looks normal, or when a remote or wall button has failed and you simply need to get the car out. In each of these cases the door is mechanically sound — only the powered drive is offline.

There is, however, one situation that changes everything: a broken torsion spring. Your springs, not the opener, carry the real weight of the door. When a torsion spring snaps — often with a bang loud enough to wake the house — the opener may be the only thing still holding the door up. Pull the release in that moment and the door can drop with enough force to injure anyone beneath it and crack the panels. The same caution applies to a door that has come off its track, a frayed or hanging cable or roller, or visibly bent hardware.

How can you tell? A healthy door sits level, and the springs above it look intact and tightly wound. A door with a snapped spring often hangs crooked, shows a clear gap in the spring coil, or feels impossibly heavy to lift. When anything looks off, leave the cord alone and call our emergency repair team instead.

⚠️ Safety Warning: High-Tension Springs & Electrical Hazards

Garage door torsion springs are wound under extreme tension — enough stored energy to cause severe injury or death if a spring, cable, or winding bar slips. Opener units also connect to 120V AC household wiring. Never attempt to adjust, wind, or replace springs, cables, or opener wiring yourself, and never pull the emergency release on a door you suspect has a broken spring. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) links thousands of garage door injuries each year to spring failures and improper repairs. When in doubt, hire a licensed, insured garage door technician. Every CallOrange technician is licensed, insured, and trained to handle these components safely.

How to Use Your Garage Door Emergency Release Cord Safely, Step by Step

When the door is sound and you’ve ruled out a broken spring, releasing it by hand takes under a minute. Here is the process our technicians teach every customer.

Step 1 — Lower the Door First if You Can

Whenever possible, disconnect the release while the door is fully closed. A closed door rests on the floor, so there’s no stored height for it to fall from and no chance of it dropping. If the power died with the door open, support the door or have a second person help before you pull the handle — and never stand directly beneath a raised door as you release it.

Step 2 — Pull the Red Handle Straight Down

Grip the red handle and pull it straight down in one firm motion. You’ll feel the lever click as the trolley separates from the door arm. Pulling down rather than at an angle keeps the mechanism from binding and makes reconnecting easier later.

Step 3 — Operate the Door by Hand

With the opener disengaged, lift the door using the lift handles or the bottom edge, raising it smoothly to fully open. A properly balanced door will glide and stay where you leave it. If it feels extremely heavy or wants to slam shut, that’s a sign the springs are doing too little — stop, lower it gently, and call a professional. When you’re finished, lower the door fully so your home stays secure.

Step 4 — Reconnect the Opener

Once power returns, re-engage the trolley. On most LiftMaster, Chamberlain, and Genie units you simply pull the red handle back toward the door (or straight down again, depending on the model) until the lever re-locks, then run the opener through one full cycle. The trolley clicks back into the carriage automatically as the door moves. If it won’t re-latch, our opener repair specialists can reset it quickly.

Why Openers and Doors Fail When You Least Expect It

Understanding why you ended up reaching for that cord helps you prevent the next emergency. Across the Phoenix metro, a handful of regional factors put unusual stress on garage systems.

Arizona heat is the first culprit. Attached garages routinely climb past 120°F in summer, which thins factory grease, hardens the nylon on rollers, and bakes the electronics inside the opener’s logic board. Power surges from monsoon storms are the second — a single surge can fry an opener’s circuit board and leave you depending on the manual release until a replacement arrives. The third is simple wear: every torsion spring is rated in cycles, and a busy family opening the door several times a day can exhaust that rating in just a few years.

Brand and age matter, too. A modern LiftMaster with myQ or a Genie running Aladdin Connect behaves differently from a twenty-year-old chain drive, and resetting a connected unit after a manual release sometimes calls for re-syncing the app. Our team works across every major brand daily, which is why we can talk a customer through a smart-opener reset as easily as an older model — and why we cover the full range in our guide to garage door home automation.

None of this is only about getting the car out. A door that opens evenly and seals tightly protects your curb appeal, reinforces your home security by latching reliably every night, and — paired with insulated panels — helps your garage hold temperature against the desert heat. The release cord is your backup; a well-maintained door is what keeps you from needing it.

Preventing the Next Garage Door Lockout

The best way to handle a manual release is to rarely need one. A few practical upgrades dramatically cut the odds of getting stuck again.

The biggest one is a battery backup opener. Many newer LiftMaster and Chamberlain models include an integrated backup battery that keeps the door working through a power outage — the exact scenario that sends most homeowners hunting for the red cord. If your opener is more than a decade old, our opener installation team can tell you whether a backup-equipped upgrade makes sense for your home.

A quality surge protector on the garage circuit is a smart, low-cost second layer, especially heading into monsoon season when lightning-driven surges take out opener boards across the Valley. And nothing beats a routine inspection: a yearly garage door tune-up catches the worn spring, fraying cable, or tired opener gear before it strands you. We keep maintenance histories for our regular clients so we can replace parts on a schedule that suits you — not on the door’s worst possible day. You’ll find more seasonal guidance on our blog.

Manual Operation vs. Calling a Professional: Making the Right Call

There’s a clear line between what’s safe to handle yourself and what calls for a trained, insured technician. Releasing a sound door, operating it by hand, and reconnecting the opener are well within any homeowner’s ability. Diagnosing why the door failed — and anything involving springs, cables, or electrical components — is not.

The reason is simple: torsion springs store enormous energy and are responsible for the most serious garage door injuries in the country every year. The same goes for cables under load and 120V opener wiring. Our certified technicians carry the tools, training, and insurance to handle those components safely, and we’d always rather you call than risk it. The table below shows where that line falls.

Safe to Do Yourself vs. Best Left to CallOrange

Task Safe to DIY? Best Left to a Pro
Pulling the release on a sound door ✓ Yes
Operating a balanced door by hand ✓ Yes
Reconnecting the opener trolley ✓ Usually We’ll reset it if it won’t latch
Diagnosing why the opener failed Limited ✓ Full diagnostic
Adjusting or replacing torsion springs ✗ Never ✓ Licensed, insured techs
Repairing or replacing cables ✗ Never ✓ Pro only
Opener circuit board or wiring repair ✗ Never ✓ Pro only
Realigning a door that’s off track ✗ Never ✓ Pro only
Annual safety & balance inspection Limited ✓ Recommended yearly

If you’re ever unsure which side of that line you’re on, the safest move is a quick call to our service team. We offer 24/7 emergency dispatch across Tempe and the greater Phoenix area, and you can always reach us through our contact page or stop by our shop on Google Maps.

Frequently Asked Questions — Garage Door Emergency Release Cord

What does the garage door emergency release cord do?

The red release cord disconnects your door from the opener’s trolley so you can raise or lower it by hand. It’s designed for power outages or opener failures, letting you operate the door manually until the opener is working again.

Is it safe to pull the release cord while the door is open?

Only with care. A raised door can fall once it’s disconnected from the opener, so support it or have a second person help, and never stand directly beneath it. Whenever possible, release the door while it’s fully closed. If you’re unsure, our Tempe team can talk you through it.

Why shouldn’t I use the release cord if a spring is broken?

Your torsion springs carry the door’s weight. If a spring snaps, the opener may be the only thing holding the door up — pulling the release then can let it crash down. If the door is crooked, extremely heavy, or you heard a loud bang, leave the cord alone and call a professional.

How do I reconnect my opener after using the release?

Once power returns, pull the red handle back toward the door (or straight down again, depending on the model) until the lever re-locks, then run the opener through one cycle. The trolley re-latches automatically as the door moves. If it won’t reconnect, our opener specialists can reset it the same day.

Will the emergency release work during a power outage?

Yes — that’s exactly what it’s for. The release is purely mechanical and needs no electricity. Many newer LiftMaster and Chamberlain openers also include a battery backup that keeps the door powered through an outage. Ask our service team whether a backup-equipped opener is right for your home.

My release cord is stuck or won’t reconnect — what now?

Don’t force it. A stuck release can point to a bent trolley, a worn lever, or a deeper mechanical issue. Our technicians can inspect and reset it safely — book a visit or find us on Google Maps.

Keep Your Family Moving When the Power Cuts Out

A dead opener doesn’t have to mean a trapped car or a missed morning. Knowing how your garage door emergency release cord works — and, just as importantly, knowing the one time not to touch it — turns a stressful surprise into a thirty-second fix. The red handle is a remarkably well-engineered safety feature, and a little familiarity with it is one of the most useful things you can know about the largest moving part of your home. For the bigger picture on keeping that system dependable year-round, our breakdown of what happens during a professional garage door tune-up is a natural next read.

At CallOrange Garage Door Repair, every service call is handled by background-checked, factory-trained technicians who work on LiftMaster, Chamberlain, and Genie systems throughout Tempe. Whether you need a fast opener repair, a torsion spring replacement, or just a second opinion on whether that cord is safe to pull, we’re a phone call away. Call us at (480) 690-3344, seven days a week from 7 AM to 11 PM, with 24/7 emergency dispatch. You can schedule service online in under a minute, or visit our Tempe location on Google Maps at 2101 E Broadway Rd, Suite 3. When the power cuts out, we’ll make sure your door — and your family — keeps moving.

Garage door cable repair

Garage Door Cable Repair: What to Do When Your Garage Door Cable Snaps

When a garage door cable snaps, the door stops working — and forcing it open can cause serious damage or injury. At CallOrange Garage Door Repair, we’ve handled hundreds of broken cable calls across Mesa, AZ, and we know exactly what needs to happen next. This guide walks you through what a snapped cable means, why it happens, what risks to avoid, and how our team restores your door safely. If your cable just broke, contact us now — we serve Mesa and the surrounding East Valley with trained technicians ready to help.

What a Garage Door Cable Actually Does

Most homeowners don’t think about their garage door cables until one of them fails. These steel lift cables run along the sides of the door, connecting the bottom brackets to the cable drums mounted on the torsion bar above. When the spring system winds or unwinds, the cables guide the door’s movement up and down along the tracks. Without them, the door can’t travel safely — and in some cases, it can’t travel at all.

There are two main types of cable systems we work on at CallOrange Garage Door Repair: torsion cable systems, which use a horizontal bar and drums above the door opening, and extension spring cable systems, which run along the horizontal tracks on each side. Both serve the same purpose — distributing the load and guiding movement — but they require different repair approaches. Our technicians are trained and certified on both.

In Mesa’s climate, cables face added stress from intense heat cycles, UV exposure, and dust infiltration into the cable drum grooves. A cable that looks fine in March may be significantly weakened by August. That’s one reason we recommend annual inspections through our garage door maintenance program — we catch cable wear before it becomes a failure.

Garage Door Cable Failure: Causes, Signs & What We Do

Failure Cause Warning Signs Risk Level Our Action
Frayed or corroded strands Visible fraying, squeaking during operation High Full cable replacement on both sides
Cable off the drum groove Door jams, uneven travel, grinding noise High Drum realignment + cable reset
Improper spring tension Door feels heavy, opener strains High Spring recalibration + cable inspection
Broken bottom bracket Bottom corner gap, cable loose at base High Bracket replacement + cable attachment reset
Worn cable drum Cable slipping, door drifts to one side Medium Drum replacement + cable replacement
Cable age / cycle fatigue Door older than 7–10 years, no prior service Medium Proactive replacement during tune-up visit
Manual force during power outage Cable coiled unevenly on drum High Full cable + drum + balance inspection
Heat expansion (Mesa summers) Increased bind or hesitation in afternoon Low–Med Lubrication + cable tension adjustment
Dust buildup in drum groove Scraping noise, cable wear marks Low–Med Cleaning, lubrication, cable assessment
Fully snapped cable Door stopped, cable visibly hanging loose Critical Do not operate door — call us immediately

 

Why Garage Door Cables Snap — Common Causes We See in Mesa

Understanding why cables fail helps you prevent the next break. Based on our repair history across Mesa garage door repair calls, here are the most common causes we diagnose:

Worn or Corroded Cable Strands

Steel cables are made of dozens of tightly wound wire strands. Over time — especially in outdoor or semi-exposed garages — those strands fray, rust, or snap one at a time until the cable can no longer hold tension. By the time the cable fully breaks, most of the strands were already compromised. This is why we always inspect cables during any spring repair or service call — a weak cable next to a healthy spring is still a failure waiting to happen.

Improper Spring Tension

Cables and springs work as a system. If the torsion or extension spring is over-tensioned or improperly adjusted, the cable bears an uneven load and breaks prematurely. This is one of the most common consequences of DIY spring adjustments — the cable snaps days or weeks later and homeowners don’t connect the two events. We always evaluate spring balance when performing garage door cable repair.

Cable Coming Off the Drum

If a cable slips out of the drum groove — often caused by a door being forced manually during a power outage — the cable coils unevenly, creates a bind, and snaps under load. We see this frequently after monsoon storms in Mesa when residents lose power and manually disengage the door without following proper release procedures. Our off-track repair service addresses both the cable and drum alignment together.

Bottom Bracket Failure

The cable attaches to a bracket at the bottom corner of the door. When that bracket bends, cracks, or pulls away from the door panel, the cable tension releases suddenly — sometimes violently. We always inspect the bottom brackets during our garage door repair service calls and replace them when we find stress fractures or deformation.

Simple Age and Fatigue

Most residential garage door cables are rated for 10,000 to 15,000 cycles. One cycle equals one open and one close. For a household using the garage door four times a day, that’s roughly 7–10 years of lifespan. Cables that have never been replaced on older doors are statistically likely to fail. Our team documents cable age during all tune-up visits so you always know where you stand.

The Risks of Ignoring a Snapped Cable

A garage door with one working cable and one broken cable is dangerous. The door becomes unbalanced — it may drop suddenly on the working-cable side, bend panels, jump the tracks, or damage the opener carriage. In serious cases, a door under spring tension with a failed cable can slam down without warning, posing a real safety hazard to anyone underneath it.

We’ve responded to Mesa calls where homeowners tried to operate a door with a broken cable for days before calling us. In several of those cases, we ended up replacing panels, tracks, and rollers that would have been fine if the door had simply been left alone after the cable snapped. If your cable has broken, leave the door in the position it stopped — don’t force it up or down — and call our team at CallOrange Garage Door Repair to assess the situation safely.

Our technicians carry full personal protective equipment and follow DASMA safety standards on every cable and spring repair. We never work on a loaded spring system without first verifying that both cables and drums are properly secured — it’s a non-negotiable part of our process.

Our Garage Door Cable Repair Process — What We Do Step by Step

When you call us for garage door cable repair in Mesa, here’s exactly what happens:

Step 1: Safety Assessment

Before touching anything, our technician evaluates the door’s current position, spring tension state, and cable drum condition. If the door is partially open under spring tension, we take steps to safely stabilize it before beginning any work. We never skip this step — even on calls that seem straightforward.

Step 2: Releasing Spring Tension

Using calibrated winding bars, our certified technician carefully releases tension from the torsion spring. This is the most dangerous step in the entire repair — it’s also the step that injures the most DIY homeowners every year. Our team has completed formal training on spring tension management and carries the correct tools for every system type. If you’re researching whether to attempt this yourself, our honest advice is: don’t. The spring stores enough energy to cause serious injury.

Step 3: Removing and Replacing the Cable

We remove the broken cable from both the drum and the bottom bracket, then install a new cable matched to your door’s weight and height specifications. We use commercial-grade galvanized steel cables — not economy replacements — because in Mesa’s heat and dust, cable quality directly affects lifespan. Both cables are replaced simultaneously, even if only one broke. Running a new cable alongside an old, fatigued cable is a shortcut we don’t take.

Step 4: Drum Inspection and Realignment

We inspect both cable drums for groove wear, cracks, and set screw integrity. A worn drum groove will shred a new cable in weeks. If the drum shows wear, we replace it. Then we wind and set the cable in the correct groove before reloading spring tension.

Step 5: Spring Tension Recalibration

After the cables are set, we recalibrate spring tension to match your door’s weight. We test door balance by disconnecting the opener and manually raising the door to the halfway point — a properly balanced door should hold its position without drifting up or down. If it drifts, we adjust until it holds. This final balance test is a critical quality step we perform on every spring and cable repair.

Step 6: Full System Test

We reconnect the opener, run the door through five full cycles, verify the auto-reverse safety feature, and check for any abnormal sounds or hesitation. Before we leave, we document the repair and provide a written summary including cable gauge, drum condition, and spring tension setting. Transparency is part of how we operate at CallOrange Garage Door Repair.

Cable Repair vs. Cable Replacement — What’s the Difference?

We get this question often. In almost all cases, the correct answer is full replacement — not repair. A cable that has snapped cannot be spliced or re-welded. It must be replaced as a complete unit. The only “repair” that’s ever appropriate is correcting the cause of the failure — like realigning a drum or adjusting spring tension — not patching the cable itself.

When we perform a cable replacement, we always replace both sides. This isn’t upselling — it’s engineering logic. Both cables were installed at the same time, have the same number of cycles on them, and have been under the same load. If one snapped, the other is not far behind. Replacing only the broken one and leaving the fatigued one in place is a short-term fix that leads to another service call within months.

If your door has other aging components — worn rollers, cracked hinges, or an opener that’s struggling — we’ll note those in our report and discuss options with you. We don’t pressure upgrades, but we do believe in giving you complete information about your system’s condition. Explore our full range of garage door services to see everything we handle.

How Long Does Garage Door Cable Repair Take in Mesa?

For a standard residential torsion cable replacement with no additional complications, our technicians typically complete the full job — including safety assessment, cable replacement, drum inspection, and spring recalibration — in 60 to 90 minutes. Extension spring cable systems may take slightly longer depending on the configuration.

If we find related damage — a bent track, a cracked bottom bracket, or a drum that needs replacement — we’ll let you know on-site and discuss whether to address it the same day. We carry a wide inventory of cable gauges, drum sizes, and hardware in our service vehicles, which means we rarely need to schedule a return visit for parts.

We serve Mesa, Gilbert, Chandler, Tempe, Scottsdale, and surrounding East Valley communities. Check our service area page to confirm we cover your neighborhood, then schedule your cable repair appointment online or by phone.

What Our Mesa Customers Say About Our Cable Repairs

Our reputation in Mesa is built on consistent, honest work. We’ve earned a strong rating across Google reviews from homeowners and property managers who’ve trusted us with cable repairs, spring replacements, and complete door installations. A few things our customers mention consistently: our technicians arrive prepared, explain the problem clearly before starting, and don’t push unnecessary add-ons.

We’re proud of that reputation and we work to maintain it on every call. You can read our verified reviews and get directions on our Google Business listing, where you’ll also find our service hours and contact information. Local trust matters to us — we’re a Mesa-based operation, not a national franchise, and every technician who shows up at your home is part of our trained team.

If you’re comparing options for your garage door cable repair, we encourage you to read our reviews, check our credentials, and compare our pricing transparently. We offer written estimates before starting any work — no surprises on the final invoice. You can also learn more about who we are and what sets our service approach apart.

Frequently Asked Questions — Garage Door Cable Repair in Mesa, AZ

Can I still use my garage door if one cable snapped?

No — and we strongly advise against it. When one cable fails, the door becomes unbalanced. Operating it puts extreme stress on the remaining cable, the opener carriage, the tracks, and the door panels. In the worst case, the door can drop suddenly or jump off the tracks while someone is underneath it. Leave the door in whatever position it stopped and call our Mesa repair team before attempting to use it again.

How much does garage door cable repair cost in Mesa?

The cost depends on the cable type, whether the drums need replacement, and the spring system involved. At CallOrange Garage Door Repair, we provide a written estimate before beginning any work — no surprises on the final invoice. Our pricing includes both cable sides, all hardware, and the full balance test. Contact us for an accurate quote based on your specific door and system.

Do you replace both cables even if only one broke?

Yes — always. Both cables were installed at the same time, have accumulated the same number of cycles, and have been under equal load. If one failed, the other is likely close behind. Replacing only the broken cable is a short-term fix that leads to another service call within months. We replace both cables on every repair using commercial-grade galvanized steel matched to your door’s weight and height specifications.

Is garage door cable repair something I can do myself?

We don’t recommend it. Garage door cables operate under high tension directly connected to the spring system — and torsion springs store enough energy to cause serious injuries when handled incorrectly. Releasing and resetting spring tension requires calibrated winding bars, specific training, and hands-on experience. Our technicians are formally trained and carry the correct tools for every system type. The repair cost is far less than an emergency room visit.

How long does a cable repair take?

For a standard residential torsion cable replacement — including safety check, cable and drum inspection, replacement, spring recalibration, and balance test — our technicians typically complete the job in 60 to 90 minutes. We carry extensive inventory in our service vehicles, so most repairs are completed in a single visit with no need to return for parts.

What areas does CallOrange Garage Door Repair serve near Mesa?

We serve Mesa and the broader East Valley, including Gilbert, Chandler, Tempe, Scottsdale, and surrounding communities. Visit our service areas page for a complete list, or find us and read our verified reviews on our Google Maps listing. If you’re unsure whether we cover your neighborhood, call us — we’ll confirm right away.

 

When Your Cable Snaps, the Next Step Matters More Than the Break

A snapped garage door cable is frustrating, but it’s a solvable problem — when it’s handled by trained technicians who understand the full system. At CallOrange Garage Door Repair, our Mesa team approaches every garage door cable repair with the same precision we bring to a complete door replacement or a routine tune-up. We don’t cut corners on materials, we don’t skip the balance test, and we don’t leave until the system is working the way it should.

If you haven’t already, take a look at our articles on garage door maintenance best practices — understanding your door’s full system is the best way to prevent the next emergency call.

Call or message CallOrange Garage Door Repair today for professional garage door cable repair in Mesa, AZ. Our technicians are trained, our pricing is transparent, and our work is backed by a service guarantee. Book your repair appointment here — or find us, read our reviews, and get directions through our Google Maps listing. We’re here when you need us.