Garage Door Motor & Opener Repairs in Melbourne
When the motor hums but the door won’t move — or nothing happens at all — it’s usually a quick fix, not a new opener. We diagnose the fault on the spot, give you an honest call on repair versus replace, and carry parts for the major brands.
Most openers can be saved
A dead garage door opener doesn’t automatically mean buying a new one. Nine times out of ten it comes down to a single worn component — a tired capacitor, a stripped drive gear, a sensor that’s drifted out of line — and swapping that part gets you running again for a fraction of a full replacement. So we always look at repairing first.
That said, there’s a point where repairs stop making sense. If the unit is fifteen-odd years old, the parts are discontinued, or the motor itself has burnt out, pouring money into it just delays the inevitable. When that’s the situation we’ll tell you plainly and quote on a replacement instead — no pressure, no scare tactics, just the honest version.
The faults we see most
If your opener is doing any of these, there’s a good chance we’ve fixed the exact same thing this week:
Humming, no movement
A failed capacitor or a seized gear is the usual culprit — often a same-visit fix.
Starts, then reverses
Nearly always the travel limits or the safety sensors needing a realignment.
Works on and off
Intermittent faults point to worn gears, a tired logic board, or a dying remote.
Grinding or clunking
That rattle is often a stripped nylon drive gear — an inexpensive part to replace.
No response at all
We’ll check the power, the board and the motor before recommending anything.
Remote or wall button dead
One control working and the other not is usually wiring or a faulty switch.
Brands and parts we work with
We service the openers you’ll actually find on Melbourne homes — B&D, Merlin, Steel-Line, Gliderol, Centurion, Dominator, ATA and Guardian among them. Whether it’s a sectional door opener, a roller door motor or a tilt-door unit, the common repairs don’t change much: capacitors, drive gears, logic boards, travel-limit resets, sensor realignment and remote re-coding. We keep the parts that fail most often on the van, which is why so many jobs get sorted in a single visit.
Not sure if it’s worth repairing?
That’s exactly the call we’ll make for you — honestly, and before any work starts. Give us a ring and we’ll point you the right way.
How a motor repair goes
We diagnose on site
We test the motor, capacitor, board, sensors and travel limits to find the fault that’s actually causing the trouble.
You get the honest version
What’s wrong, what a repair costs, and whether replacing is genuinely the smarter spend. Your call, with the facts in front of you.
We fix it or fit it
Repair on the spot where we can, or install a new opener with the remotes paired and the auto-reverse safety tested.
If a new motor really is the answer
When replacement is the better option, we fit a quality opener matched to your door’s weight and size — not the cheapest box on the shelf. You’ll get the remotes paired, the wall control set up, soft start-and-stop where the unit supports it, and the auto-reverse safety feature tested before we pack up. New installs come with a warranty, and we’ll run you through how it all works before we leave.
Motor & opener questions, answered
Can you repair my opener, or do I need a whole new one?
How much does a motor repair cost?
Do you supply and program new remotes and keypads?
My opener works intermittently — is that a problem?
Motor playing up? Let’s get it sorted.
Tell us what it’s doing and we’ll usually know roughly what we’re dealing with before we even arrive.