Craftsman Garage Door Openers. Which One Is Right For You?

Craftsman Garage Door Openers. Which One Is Right For You?

This article is not a review of the individual garage door openers. This article is just a summary to help you determine which opener is right for you. The next article in this series will go through the different types of Craftsman openers.

You can use this summary to compare other the features of other brands.

So you go to your local Sears store and there is a whole wall of garage door openers. The sales associate is helpful and shows you ALL the items. But you just leave confused. I’ll make it easy here and give you the simplest way to figure out which Craftsman garage door opener is best for you. There are five basic steps to help you get the right door opener and installed in you location.

Step One, Measure the height of you door:
Step Two, Select the HP (horsepower):
Step Three, Select the type of garage door opener:
Step Four, Select the type of remotes you need:
Step Five, Professional Installation or Install it yourself:

Step One, Measure the height of you door:

Measure the height of the opening, not the door itself. Most garages door openings are around 7 feet high. If your opening is 8 feet, 9 feet or 10 feet you will have to buy an extension in addition to the garage door opener itself. If it is around 8 feet buy the 8 foot extension. If it is 9 or 10 feet buy the 10 foot extension.

Step Two, Select the HP:

There are two horsepower ratings for Sears Openers. 1/2 HP and 3/4 HP.

If you have an aluminum, aluminum insulated, or fiberglass door a 1/2 HP is plenty strong to open both a single car (7 to 9 feet wide) or a double car (16 feet wide) door.

If you have a wood door, a door with windows installed in it, a steel door or one of the new doors that look like they are off an old carriage house I recommend you go with the 3/4 HP door. (If a magnet sticks to your door it is steel.)

A new single car carriage style door can use a 1/2 HP opener.

If you have an extra tall door (9 or 10 feet) or a door that is wider than 16 feet I also recommend you go with the 3/4 HP door.

If you have a one-piece door (usually and old door made out of wood) I recommend a 3/4 HP door.

Step Three, Select the type:

There are three basic types of garage door openers. Chain drive, belt drive, and screw drive.

Chain drive garage door openers are what you are used to. They are reliable, noisy and usually last a long, long time. They come in many different sizes and Sears has an economy version, homeowner versions and heavy duty versions. These chain drive garage door openers are usually the best value and can be easily sized for you garage door. You can buy extensions for the opener for 8 foot and 10 foot doors.

Belt drive garage door openers are relatively new on the market. It uses a metal reinforced belt instead of a chain to make the drive much quieter than a chain drive. It’s usually a little faster than a chain. If your garage is under the living space of your house and it sounds like a herd of elephants in your bedroom when someone uses the garage door the quiet belt drive may be the best choice for you. You can buy an 8 foot extension kit but not a 10 ft.

Screw drive units feature the fewest number of moving parts. They are powerful and quieter than chain drives. I believe Stanley was the first to introduce the screw drive garage door opener 15 years or so ago. Stanley is not making garage door openers but Sears and Genie still have these available. I expect the screw drives to be replaced with “torsion spring” technology in a few years. You can buy an 8 foot extension for this type but not a 10 foot.

Step Four, Select the remotes: There are different types of remotes.  Single button – one button, one door. Mini – small remote to hook right on your key chain.  Three function – more buttons to control more doors and even the light in your home.  Wireless keypads – attach this to the outside of your garage to open the door securely and safely.  Finger Print Wireless Keypad – accepts only the fingerprints you have programmed into it. Great for families with children.  Door Monitor – You can use this inside your home to check if the garage door is open or not.

Sears offers different “packages” with the garage door openers to give you the best value.

Step Five, Professional Installation or Install it yourself

I put this choice as a separate step because there is a good amount of work to install a garage door opener.  Yes, your father-in-law can probably install it, but do you really want to buy all that beer and make all those trips to the hardware store?  If you have not installed one yourself before plan on 4 to 6 hours for a new installation and 2 to 4 hours to replace an existing opener.  Sears offer professional installation at a very reasonable price (in my area $109 and the installers have put in hundreds of openers) so it is worth a discussion whether it is a good choice for you to install it yourself.

The next article puts all of the Sears Craftsman Garage Openers in one convienant place for you to compare.  You can click on a link after each opener to go to a review.

Related posts:

  1. Stanley Garage Door Openers Share Stanley Garage Door Openers have not been made by...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

This entry was posted in Craftsman Openers, Garage Door Openers, Pick the Right Opener. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Craftsman Garage Door Openers. Which One Is Right For You?

  1. Pingback: Tweets that mention Craftsman Garage Door Openers. Which One Is Right For You? | toolboxhero.com -- Topsy.com

  2. Sarah says:

    Dang. LOL Ah well what’s another $200 between garage door owner and repair place. Cements a lovely relationship. Wish they’d come up with a built in surge so that we don’t have to try to remember to protect EVERYTHING.

    We lost phones, the home networking box, a tv, a graphic card, and the garage door opener. LOL

    It’s amazing how accustomed you get to a automatic opener.

  3. Paul says:

    @Sarah,

    Thank you, You don’t need a ceramic surge protector as such, but it should be current rated to handle the garage door’s motor. The back panel of the opener box itself will tell you the amperage. Many of the surge protectors from electronic store are not heavy enough to handle induction motor loads like a garage door opener.

  4. Sarah says:

    There is one other thing you should do when you install a garage door opener. Get a small surge protector to plug it into.

    Had a bad lightening strike a year (maybe 2) ago and it fried the electronics in the opener and messed up the laser thingy.

    The repair bill was a lot more than the little surge protector. The fellow at Best Buy (where we got it) said to make sure it was a ceramic protector. Something about the others only work for a year or so then no longer protect.

    Either that or he just wanted us to pay more. :-)

    Thanks for the handy tips.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

CommentLuv Enabled