A cable that jumps its drum leaves the door tilted and grinding — and every extra open-close cycle winds the damage tighter. We unwind the system safely, re-seat the cable in its drum grooves, and fix whatever knocked it loose, usually a loose set-screw, slack from a spring issue, or an obstruction under the door. Most San Francisco re-seats run $140–$280.
| Cable re-seated on drum, tension reset | $140–$280 |
| Re-seat with new cable pair (if frayed) | $210–$390 |
Typical San Francisco and Bay Area ranges (parts + labor), last updated July 2026 — see the full SF garage door cost guide. You get an exact, upfront quote before any work begins — call (415) 494-4774 or book online.
The cable needs constant tension to stay in its grooves. Anything that creates sudden slack — the door hitting something on the way down, a spring losing torque, a sticky roller — lets the cable walk off the drum. Loose drum set-screws and worn grooves do it too. Re-seating the cable without fixing that root cause just schedules a repeat visit, so we always diagnose the trigger.
We'd advise against it. To re-seat a cable you have to release and re-apply spring tension with winding bars, and getting the drum timing wrong on one side leaves the door permanently crooked. It looks like a five-minute fix; it's actually a counterbalance job.
If the cable is undamaged and just needs re-seating with a tension reset, plan on $140–$280 in San Francisco. If the cable frayed when it jumped — common, because it often gets pinched — a new pair brings the job to $210–$390. Either way you approve one exact number before we start.
Please don't run it. A tilted door drags its rollers against the track, and a few more cycles can bend track sections and crack panel stiles — turning a sub-$300 fix into several times that. Disconnect the opener, leave the door parked, and get it looked at within a day or two. We can usually come the same day.
Often handled in the same visit as cable off drum repair:
Same-day, true 24/7 cable off drum repair across San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin, and the East Bay — including: