Garage Door Parts in Nellis Air Force Base, NV
If you live in on-base housing at Nellis Air Force Base and your garage door has stopped working, you need a technician who already knows how to get through the gate — not one figuring it out on the fly. Summit Garage Door Service Las Vegas stocks parts for the hardware found in base housing units across the 89191 zip code and responds quickly to both individual resident requests and batch work orders coordinated through Hunt Military Communities. Call us at (775) 402-5137 for a free estimate from a technician who’s been on base before and knows exactly what those doors need.

Why Summit Garage Door Service Las Vegas Is Nellis Air Force Base’s Preferred Garage Door Parts Company
Our Garage Door Parts team has built a real working relationship with the housing stock at Nellis Air Force Base — not by accident, but because we took the time to understand how on-base work actually operates. That means completing technician pre-vetting, clearing vehicle inspections at the security checkpoint, and learning how maintenance coordinators submit work orders through the Hunt Military Communities portal. We don’t show up and figure it out at the gate.
Eric Johnson, the owner and lead technician at Summit Garage Door Service Las Vegas, personally handles service calls. When you contact us, you’re not getting routed through a dispatch center — you’re reaching the person who will show up at your unit with the right parts already on the truck. That accountability matters, especially when your housing coordinator is managing seven units on the same street at once. Our 312 verified five-star reviews reflect exactly that kind of consistent, specific execution — not occasional good days.
Our Garage Door Parts Services in Nellis Air Force Base
Torsion Spring Replacement
Torsion spring failure is the single most common service call we run at Nellis Air Force Base, and the reason is structural: on-base housing was built in uniform government-spec waves from the 1950s through the 1980s, which means entire blocks of identical springs were installed at the same time. Those springs have spent decades absorbing the 50–60°F overnight-to-afternoon temperature swings that occur every spring and fall in the northeastern Las Vegas Valley — and when one fatigues and fractures, its neighbors on the same block are typically days or weeks behind it. A typical torsion spring replacement at Nellis Air Force Base runs $180–$340, and we stock high-cycle springs rated specifically for the heat environment here.
We recently completed a batch work order flagged by a Hunt Military Communities maintenance coordinator covering seven units in the same housing block — all running original 1970s-era one-piece torsion assemblies whose springs had fatigued under decades of that same temperature cycling. Our technicians cleared the vehicle inspection at the security gate, confirmed every unit shared the same obsolete spring specification, and replaced all seven with modern high-cycle units in a single mobilization. Every door came in under $340 per unit. That’s the operational reality of working at Nellis Air Force Base — and it’s why having a technician who understands the batch-failure dynamic matters.
Extension Spring Replacement
Some of the newer Hunt Military Communities additions and mid-period housing units at Nellis Air Force Base use extension spring systems rather than torsion assemblies. Extension springs are typically mounted on either side of the door and, like their torsion counterparts in base housing, tend to reach end-of-life in clusters when the surrounding units were built on the same contract. We carry extension spring hardware compatible with the door widths and weights common in 89191 housing and can assess whether a single spring swap is appropriate or whether the opposing spring should be replaced simultaneously to avoid a callback within weeks.
Cables & Drums
Cable and drum failures in Nellis Air Force Base housing are largely a product of deferred maintenance. Base housing coordinators run reactive work-order schedules — a door gets flagged when it fails, not before. That means cables on legacy one-piece and early sectional doors are often decades past their rated service life by the time we see them. A frayed or snapped cable turns a manageable parts job into one that also stresses the drums and bottom brackets, so we inspect the entire cable-and-drum assembly on every visit rather than swapping only the visible failure point. Cable and drum repair at Nellis Air Force Base runs $130–$250 depending on hardware configuration.
Rollers & Hinges
Original steel rollers on 1960s–1980s government-spec doors at Nellis Air Force Base create noise and wear that compounds over time — the heat cycling here accelerates bearing degradation faster than in milder climates. Replacing worn steel rollers with nylon-bearing units quiets the door noticeably and reduces side-load stress on the hinges and tracks. Roller replacement at Nellis Air Force Base runs $110–$220. We also check hinge condition during every roller job because on doors this age, a cracked hinge is rarely traveling alone.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Nellis Air Force Base
Summit Garage Door Service Las Vegas is trained and stocked for eight major brands: LiftMaster, Chamberlain, Genie, Clopay, Amarr, Wayne Dalton, Craftsman, and Raynor. On-base housing at Nellis Air Force Base tends to feature older LiftMaster and Craftsman openers in units that have been upgraded at any point, and Clopay and Wayne Dalton door panels in more recently managed Hunt Military Communities properties. We carry parts for all of them, which matters when you’re trying to complete a batch of units in a single visit — not waiting on a parts order to close out the work order.

Common Garage Door Parts Problems We See in Nellis Air Force Base Homes
- Simultaneous torsion spring fracture across a housing block. Government-spec construction means every door on a given street was built to the same specification and installed in the same year. Springs age in unison, and a failure on one unit is a reliable predictor of failures on the next three or four — often within the same season.
- UV and heat degradation of bottom seals and weatherstripping. Nellis sits where summer tarmac temperatures regularly exceed 130°F, and the rubber on original 1960s–1980s door seals simply can’t survive that year after year. Near-annual bottom seal replacement is the norm in base housing, not the exception — and entire blocks need service simultaneously because they were installed at the same time.
- Cable and drum failure on legacy one-piece hardware. Reactive maintenance schedules mean cables on the oldest hardware rarely get inspected before they snap. By the time a work order is submitted, the cable has often taken out a drum or a bottom bracket along with it, expanding what should be a $130 job.
- Worn rollers causing track misalignment on original steel-roller doors. Steel rollers on 1970s and 1980s doors corrode and flatten under the combined stress of desert heat and decades of cycles. A flattened roller creates uneven pressure on the track, and if it goes unaddressed, it bends the track — turning a roller swap into a track repair.
Pricing for Garage Door Parts in Nellis Air Force Base, NV
Here are the ranges you’ll see for the most common parts jobs at Nellis Air Force Base. These reflect the Las Vegas Valley market and apply directly to the hardware found in 89191 housing units.
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Torsion Spring Replacement | $180–$340 |
| Cable & Drum Repair | $130–$250 |
| Bottom Seal / Weatherstripping Replacement | $150–$600 (varies by door width and material; base housing standard units typically land in the lower half of this range) |
| Roller Replacement | $110–$220 |
What moves the number within each range is mainly hardware age, door width, and whether secondary components — a drum, a bracket, a hinge — need to go at the same time. On batch work orders covering multiple Nellis Air Force Base units, per-unit costs benefit from a single mobilization rather than separate trips. Call (775) 402-5137 for a free, specific estimate before any work starts.
We Also Serve Cities Near Nellis Air Force Base
Beyond Nellis Air Force Base, we regularly run service calls throughout the surrounding communities. If you’re in Sunrise Manor, North Las Vegas, Winchester, or Las Vegas proper, we’re covering those areas with the same parts inventory and the same technician — Eric Johnson — on the truck. Response times to all of these communities from our Las Vegas base are fast, and the pricing ranges above apply across the board.
Serving Nellis Air Force Base, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Nellis Air Force Base area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Garage Door Parts in Nellis Air Force Base
Yes — we’ve completed the pre-vetting and credentialing process required for contractor access to Nellis Air Force Base, and our technicians pass through the vehicle inspection checkpoint at the security gate under our own credentials. You do not need to arrange an escort or meet us outside the perimeter. We’re familiar with the access process, so there’s no delay on your end. Call (775) 402-5137 to schedule — just let us know it’s an on-base address when you call.
For a single worn spring or cable on an otherwise intact assembly, a targeted parts replacement makes sense and keeps costs in the $130–$340 range depending on the component. Where it shifts toward a full retrofit is when the door itself — panels, hinges, track — shows significant wear alongside the hardware failure. On 1970s one-piece doors, if you’re replacing the spring and the cables are original, we typically recommend doing cables at the same time: the labor overlap is significant and it avoids a second service call within months. Eric Johnson will give you a straight assessment on-site, including what a door-and-hardware upgrade would cost compared to continued parts repair, so you can make the call with real numbers in front of you.
Two compounding factors explain it. First, on-base housing at Nellis Air Force Base was built to government spec in the same construction waves, meaning the springs across an entire block are the same age and have been through the same number of cycles — there’s no natural variation to spread failures out over time. Second, the northeastern Las Vegas Valley’s 50–60°F overnight-to-afternoon temperature swings in spring and fall put repeated stress on torsion hardware that most climates simply don’t replicate. A spring that might last 15 years in a moderate climate can fatigue significantly faster here under that constant thermal cycling. It’s not unusual — it’s the local environment doing what it does to metal hardware that was never spec’d for this kind of heat differential.
On base housing at Nellis Air Force Base, near-annual replacement of bottom seals is realistic rather than excessive. Summer tarmac temperatures that routinely exceed 130°F degrade rubber seals at an accelerated rate — what would be a three-to-five-year seal life in a temperate climate compresses significantly in the Nellis heat environment. If your seal is cracking, brittle, or has visible gaps letting in light and air at the door’s base, it needs replacing. Weatherstripping on the sides and top typically lasts a bit longer but should be inspected every season. Bottom seal and weatherstripping replacement runs $150–$600 depending on door width and material — call (775) 402-5137 and we’ll quote your specific unit.
When a maintenance coordinator at Nellis Air Force Base submits a work order through the Hunt Military Communities portal, scheduling is coordinated through the housing office rather than with individual residents — we work directly with the coordinator to confirm access windows and the number of units involved. For residents, this means your billing typically runs through the housing management structure rather than directly to you as an individual, but the work and the parts are identical to what we’d provide on a standard call. If you’re a resident who’s identified a problem and want to flag it proactively, the fastest path is submitting through your housing coordinator — we’re familiar with the process and can be on your schedule as a result.
Reviewed by Eric Johnson, Owner & Lead Technician at Summit Garage Door Service Las Vegas, serving Nellis Air Force Base, NV and the greater Las Vegas Valley since 2018.