B&D Wind-Rated Roll-A-Door Roller Garage Door product guide
Understanding Your B&D Wind-Rated Roller Door Finish
A B&D wind-rated roller door is designed for harsh conditions (including high-wind and cyclone-prone regions) and uses Wind-Locking technology to help keep the curtain engaged in the guides during extreme weather. That extra strength is only useful if the door can still move freely in the guides—so cleaning isn’t just about looks. It’s also about keeping the guides and Wind-Locking components free of grit, salt, and buildup that can increase friction.
Common finish types you may have
B&D wind-rated roller doors are commonly supplied in:
- COLORBOND® steel colours (pre-finished steel)
- Timber Look / Timber Coat™ style finishes (a decorative “timber look” finish applied at the factory)
The finish you have matters because aggressive cleaning methods can dull the surface, mark the timber-look pattern, or drive debris into the guide system.
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Contents
- What “Wind-Rated” Changes About Cleaning
- Safe Cleaning Principles
- Routine Washing Frequency
- Step-by-Step Cleaning Method
- Finish-Specific Notes
- Guide Tracks and Wind-Locking Component Care
- Spot Cleaning: Bird Droppings, Sap, and Marks
- After-Cleaning Functional Check
- Maintenance Schedule Snapshot
- Troubleshooting After Cleaning
- Frequently Asked Questions
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What Wind-Rated Changes About Cleaning
Wind-rated roller doors include additional hardware and engagement features (Wind-Locking) that help keep the door in the track under wind load. In practice, that means:
- Door edges and guide interiors matter more than on standard doors.
- Cleaning that leaves residue, or maintenance that adds oil/grease inside guides, can trap dust and grit where the Wind-Locking engagement happens.
- You should focus on removing contaminants (salt, dust, industrial fallout) and keeping sliding surfaces clean and smooth, rather than “making them slippery” with heavy lubricants.
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Safe Cleaning Principles
What to use
- Clean water and a soft brush or soft cloth
- Mild detergent in water (only when needed for visible grime)
- Gentle technique: let water + mild detergent do the work, not scrubbing force
What to avoid
- Abrasive pads, scouring sponges, steel wool on the curtain finish
- Harsh cleaners (anything that etches, strips, or scratches finishes)
- Spraying water into electrical components (see below)
- Flooding the door edges/guide area with products that can leave buildup
Important safety note if you have an automatic opener
- Do not wash the automatic opener (motor unit, controls, remotes, wall button area). Keep water away from anything electrical.
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Routine Washing Frequency
A practical baseline for maintaining the finish is:
- Wash down the door regularly (about every 14 days) using clean water and a soft brush/cloth.
- Wash more frequently if your door is exposed to:
- Salt air / coastal conditions
- Industrial pollutants
- Heavy dust, grime, or frequent storms
If you’re in a wind-rated region, you’re often also in a high exposure region (salt + wind-driven grit), so “more frequent” cleaning is common and worthwhile.
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Step-by-Step Cleaning Method
1) Choose the right conditions
- Clean in cooler parts of the day (avoid hot sun on the door if possible).
- Keep the door closed while washing the outside face to reduce runoff into the guides.
2) Pre-rinse (recommended)
- Rinse the surface with clean water to remove loose dust and grit.
- This reduces the chance you’ll drag grit across the finish.
3) Wash
- Use a soft brush or cloth with clean water.
- If needed, add mild detergent to a bucket of water and wash gently.
- Work in manageable sections from top to bottom.
4) Rinse thoroughly
- Rinse off any detergent so it doesn’t dry as residue—especially around:
- The door edges
- The bottom rail
- Areas where grime collects in slat lines/pressings
5) Optional dry/wipe
- If you want a cleaner finish (fewer water marks), wipe with a clean soft cloth.
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Finish-Specific Notes
COLORBOND® steel finishes
- Treat it like a quality painted metal surface:
- Soft brush/cloth
- Clean water
- Mild detergent only when needed
- Don’t “polish” with abrasive products—micro-scratches can dull the look over time.
Timber Look / Timber Coat™ style finishes
- Use the same gentle wash method, but be even more conservative:
- Prefer soft cloths over brushes if the finish marks easily
- Avoid heavy scrubbing
- Keep detergents mild and rinse thoroughly to avoid residue lines.
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Guide Tracks and Wind-Locking Component Care
Wind-rated doors depend heavily on clean guide operation.
The key rule
Do not grease or oil the guide tracks.
For roller doors, guide tracks should be kept clean and smooth, not coated in oil that can collect grit.
Cleaning the inside of guide tracks (periodic maintenance)
Every few months (or more often in harsh environments):
- Wipe the internal sections of the guide tracks with a cloth lightly dampened with mineral turps or methylated spirits (used sparingly).
- For roller doors, polish the tracks to remove dirt and help the running strips glide smoothly.
- Keep solvents off the curtain finish as much as possible—apply to the cloth, not directly to the door.
Wind-Locking areas (door edges)
- Keep the door edges and guide mouths free of:
- Mud
- Caked dust
- Salt crystals
- Cobweb build-up
- After washing, a light wipe around the visible guide entry area is helpful—again, no oil/grease in the guides.
Lock care (if your door has a key lock)
- If the key lock becomes stiff:
- Use a light spray lubricant into the keyhole (avoid greasing the lock mechanism).
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Spot Cleaning: Bird Droppings, Sap, and Marks
- Remove bird droppings and tree sap as soon as practical using:
- Soft cloth
- Mild detergent in water
- Rinse well afterward
- Avoid scraping with hard tools. If a deposit is stubborn:
- Soften first with water and gentle detergent
- Wipe repeatedly rather than scrubbing harder
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After-Cleaning Functional Check
After you finish (and everything is rinsed):
- Operate the door through one full open/close cycle
- Listen and feel for changes:
- New scraping sounds
- Stiff movement
- Jerky travel
- If you notice issues:
- Re-check that detergent hasn’t dried near the door edges/guides
- Re-rinse those areas
- If symptoms persist, arrange a service inspection (especially important on wind-rated doors)
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Maintenance Schedule Snapshot
A simple, warranty-friendly rhythm many owners follow:
- Regular wash-down: about every 14 days (more in coastal/industrial conditions)
- Operational check: every 3–6 months
- Lubrication (only where appropriate): every 3–6 months
- (Important: guide tracks are cleaned/polished—not greased/oiled)
- Professional service: recommended annually (especially in harsh environments)
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Troubleshooting After Cleaning
Door feels heavier or stiffer
Most common causes:
- Grit or residue in the guides
- Debris caught at the guide entry What to do:
- Rinse edges again, wipe guide entry area clean, avoid adding oil/grease to tracks
New scraping noise
Most common causes:
- Fine sand/salt in the guides (common in windy/coastal areas) What to do:
- Clean guide internals (wipe + polish), then test again
Water marks or streaking on the curtain
Most common causes:
- Detergent residue or dirty rinse water What to do:
- Re-wash with clean water and rinse thoroughly, then wipe dry with a soft cloth
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Frequently Asked Questions
Do wind-rated roller doors need different cleaning than standard roller doors?
The finish cleaning method is similar (water + soft brush/cloth + mild detergent if needed), but wind-rated doors benefit from extra attention to guide cleanliness because Wind-Locking performance depends on smooth, unobstructed movement.
Can I use a pressure washer?
It’s safer to use a garden hose and soft brush/cloth. High-pressure water can drive grit into guides and force water where you don’t want it. If you choose to use any high-pressure cleaning equipment, keep well back and avoid directing spray into door edges, guides, or any electrical components.
Should I lubricate the guide tracks to make the door quieter?
No—guide tracks for roller doors should be cleaned and polished, not greased or oiled. Oily tracks attract dust and grit, which can increase wear and friction.
What if I’m in a coastal area?
Increase washing frequency. Coastal wind can deposit salt and fine grit quickly, and wind-rated doors are often installed in exactly these environments.
What’s the fastest way to keep the door looking good long-term?
Regular light cleaning beats occasional heavy scrubbing. Frequent rinse/wash with gentle tools preserves the finish and reduces build-up around the guides.