Limit Switches & Travel Controls
Mechanical and electronic limit systems, travel adjustment, force settings, and encoder-based position tracking.
- Explain the function of mechanical and electronic limit switches in garage door openers
- Describe how encoder-based position tracking replaces mechanical limits in modern openers
- Adjust travel speed and force settings correctly using manufacturer procedures
- Identify symptoms of incorrect limit and force settings
Lesson 1
Mechanical Limit Switch Function & Adjustment
What Limit Switches Do
Limit switches tell the opener when the door has reached its fully open and fully closed positions. Without properly set limits, the opener will either stop the door short of full travel or continue driving the motor after the door has stopped - which overloads the motor, strips gears, and damages the door.
There are two limit settings on every opener:
- Open limit (up limit) - defines where the door stops in the fully open position
- Close limit (down limit) - defines where the door stops when fully closed against the floor
Mechanical Limit Systems
Older and many current economy openers use mechanical limit switches - physical switches actuated by a threaded rod or cam that moves with the trolley. As the trolley travels along the rail, a plastic actuator rides the threaded shaft. When the actuator reaches one of two adjustable stops, it trips a microswitch inside the opener housing, cutting power to the motor.
Adjusting Mechanical Limits
Most mechanical limits use a flat-head screwdriver to turn the limit adjustment. The screw typically has markings for "open" and "close" directions:
- To increase travel (door goes further): turn the screw in the direction marked with a "+" or arrow
- To decrease travel (door stops shorter): turn the opposite direction
- Each full turn typically equals 2 to 3 inches of travel change
Adjustment Rule
Make adjustments in small increments - one-quarter turn at a time. Test the door after each adjustment. Over-adjusting causes the opener to push the door into the floor or leave it partially open.
Mechanical limit switches use a threaded shaft and microswitch to define open and close positions. Always adjust in small increments (quarter-turns) and test after each change.