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17 August 2009
Have a safe spring break
You might think your garage just needs a
spring clean, not a new door spring, but
there may be a serious hazard lurking in
those dusty corners.
A consumer from Taranaki recently had a
near miss when closing his automatic garage
door. When the door was halfway closed one
of the garage door springs snapped and flew
across the garage.
These springs are under high tension and
the force would be comparable to being hit
by a sledgehammer. The spring hit and
damaged the consumer’s car, but could have
seriously injured him or his three children
who were in the garage at the time.
The Ministry of Consumer Affairs is
asking people to check that their garage
doors springs are secured by a retaining
cable. This simple measure will ensure that
as the springs wear, they do not present a
danger should the spring break.
Unless your ‘up-and-over’ garage door
springs are secured by retaining cables,
they could fly off and damage your car, your
walls or yourself. Protect yourself from an
unexpected missile by checking and securing
the springs on your garage door.
How to check if your springs are safe
The problem affects both manual and
automatic ‘up-and-over’ garage doors. If
your door is old, or does not open smoothly,
the springs maybe under extra pressure.
Go into your garage and check if the
springs on your garage door have safety
cables attached. If the spring breaks, the
cable stops it from being able to ping
across the room. If your door does not have
these retainers, contact a garage door
specialist to get safety cables fitted.
There is a voluntary standard for garage
door springs (AS/NZS 4505) which recommends
that a spring should last 10-15 years. Not
all springs will comply with this standard.
So if your garage door is more than five
years old, you might want to get the spring
changed and secured at the same time. The
Ministry suggests getting your garage door
checked for retaining straps, and then
serviced every few years to avoid problems.
Visit here for more information about
product safety.
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