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Garage Door Slow or Unresponsive Remote
in Arlington, TX
A remote that used to work from the street but now only works when you're right at the door is a common problem. The inside of a car in Arlington in July can hit 160 degrees, and that kind of heat kills batteries and damages the small circuit board inside the remote faster than most people expect. It could also be the antenna hanging from your opener unit, which gets brittle and breaks.
Quick Answer
A garage door remote that only works within a few feet of the door usually has a weak battery or a damaged antenna on the opener. In Arlington, heat inside a parked car can destroy a remote's circuit board in one summer. Check the battery first. If a new battery doesn't fix it, the antenna wire or the receiver board inside the opener likely needs attention. Call (817) 670-4611 if swapping the battery doesn't help.
Telltale Signs
Warning Signs to Watch For
- The remote only works when you are within two or three feet of the opener
- You have to press the button multiple times before the door responds
- The remote works fine in the morning but not in the afternoon heat
- A new battery didn't fix the range problem
- The wall button works every time but the remote doesn't
Root Causes
What Causes Garage Door Slow or Unresponsive Remote?
Heat-Damaged Remote Transmitter
Car interiors in Arlington regularly exceed 140 degrees on summer afternoons. That heat degrades the capacitors and circuit traces inside a remote transmitter. The remote may still send a signal, but it's too weak to reach the receiver more than a few feet away. The problem often shows up gradually over one hot season.
The Fix
Remote Replacement
A new remote programmed to your opener's frequency restores full range immediately. Storing the remote in your pocket or a bag instead of on the dashboard extends its life significantly in the Texas heat.
Broken or Missing Antenna
The opener unit has a short wire antenna that hangs down from the motor housing. It receives the signal from your remote. Arlington's attic and garage temperatures can reach 130 degrees in summer, and plastic insulation on that wire becomes brittle and cracks. If the wire gets pinched, coiled, or breaks, the receiver can barely pick up the signal.
The Fix
Antenna Repair or Receiver Replacement
If the antenna wire is just pinched or coiled up against metal, repositioning it usually restores range. A wire that is cracked or corroded needs to be replaced, and if the receiver board itself failed, that component gets swapped out.
Self-Diagnosis
Which Cause Applies to You?
Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.
| What You're Seeing | Heat-Damaged Remote Transmitter | Broken or Missing Antenna |
|---|---|---|
| Remote works fine after replacing battery but only briefly | ||
| Antenna wire on opener unit is cracked or missing | ||
| Remote was left on the car dashboard all summer | ||
| Wall button works but no remote in the household works | ||
| Range dropped off gradually over a few months |
Free Inspection
Get a Diagnosis in Arlington
An on-site inspection is the only way to confirm which cause applies to your property. Free, no obligation.
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