Periodic maintenance for doors that work for a living.

Loading docks, fire doors, high-speed doors — the equipment your operation depends on. We keep it running.

Plans

Three tiers. Built for how your door is actually used.

Essential

Annual Tune-Up

For residential doors and low-cycle commercial openings. One visit, full inspection, minor adjustments.
  • 20-point inspection
  • Lubrication, spring balance adjustments
  • Written report + photos
  • Fire doors tested and reset by a qualified technician, per NFPA-80
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Scheduled

Scheduled Semi-Annual

For strata parkades and commercial doors that work for a living. Two visits a year — we catch wear before it fails.
  • Two visits per year
  • Full component inspection
  • We can often perform this service without your being there
  • After-hours emergency rate
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Most popular

Quarterly Program

For high-speed or high-cycle doors, and mission-critical doors that absolutely cannot let you down.
  • Four visits per year
  • ULC fire-door certification
  • Cycle tracking + lifecycle plan
  • Same-day emergency SLA
  • Dedicated account manager
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

If we never use that fire door, does it still need to be tested?

Yes. Under NFPA-80, every fire door must be tested annually by a "trained rolling steel fire door technician". It must be tested, reset, and then tested and reset again, to ensure the reset worked.

Can my maintenance staff perform the drop test on a rolling steel fire door?

Only if they meet the "trained rolling steel fire door technician" bar (2025 NFPA-80 edition language). Most in-house maintenance staff do not, and the AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction, usually the local fire chief) is likely to reject self-inspections.

How do I know it actually is a fire door?

Every fire door has a tag on the bottom bar, identifying it, and that tag must still be legible. If the tag is missing or illegible, the door will fail an annual inspection. If it was installed as a fire door, then code required that opening to have fire door protection, and that's very unlikely to ever change.

Will my sprinkler system automatically trigger the door to close?

Possibly, but only if the sprinkler flow alarm is wired to the door's release. Usually the activator is a fusible link or detector, not the sprinkler itself.

My painter painted the fusible link on our fire door. Is that ok?

Unfortunately, no. Paint can insulate the fusible link from heat, and cause it not to melt in a fire. You'll need to replace that fusible link with a new one of the same rating.

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