Thanks for all the quick replies.
I disconnected the traveler from the door so there was no load on the
opener and it still does exactly the same thing. I re-checked the photo
cells and they are good. If I block the beam, the light in the receiver
goes out. Everything seems tight and well adjusted.
I think something has crapped out in the electronic guts of this thing.
On 9/14/2014 7:20 PM, David Scheidt wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 14, 2014 at 8:31 PM, Dave Cavanaugh <cavanadd@frontier.com> wrote:
>> I have a pair of Chamberlain PD200 openers in the garage. They are about 15
>> years old and until just recently have been flawless. Lately the one on my
>> wife's side (naturally) has gotten flaky. As soon as you push the button to
>> close it, it reverses and the light flashes. Opening is normal. If you
>> hold the wall mounted (hardwired) button down it will close and stay down,
>> but it will no longer close with the clicker. When the problem first
>> started the door would partially close before reversing, but now it doesn't
>> even move.
>>
>> I adjusted the photocells, lubricated everything, and adjusted the
>> sensitivity pots and turned the open and close distance pots through a few
>> turns. For a few cycles it worked ok and then reverted to it's bad
>> behavior. I called the local residential/commercial GDO business, who also
>> installed the opener in my shop a few years ago. I wasn't here, but
>> according to my wife he lubricated everything with "something heavier than
>> WD40", "adjusted" it and left. It worked for a week. I looked yesterday
>> and he had turned the sensitivity pots all the way up to 11. So, $100 down
>> the toilet.
>
> Pull the cord to release the door. Make sure it works right, your
> problem could easily be a broken spring, a jammed roller, a bent track
> or the like. (Yes, I've see a broken door cause "one opener doesn't
> work, the other does", more than once.) Assuming the door is fine,
> train your remote to open your wife's opener, and see if that makes a
> difference. If it does, change the battery in hers, train it to your
> door, and call it day. If it doesn't, go buy a new one. I'm pretty
> sure chamberlain are using the same mounting setup they have for many
> years, so that it's a breeze to replace just the head.
>
> If your door is broken, call another company to fix it. And check the
> other side, it may be failing the same way.
_______________________________________________
Shop-talk@autox.team.net
Archive: http://www.team.net/archive
|