Get free shipping on your order, with any water filter subscription. Find my filter

Open Hamburger Menu
Sears Parts Direct
Tips to find your model number
Genie 1020L ac chain drive garage door opener

Genie 1020L ac chain drive garage door opener Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Genie 1020L ac chain drive garage door opener, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

By Schematic
SELECT DIAGRAM
?

This is the number corresponding to the part on the diagram / schematic

Browse Parts for 1020L AC Chain Drive Garage Door Opener

  • Garage Door Opener Interrupter Cup for Genie 1020L - Part 33356A

    #NI07

    All parts diagram

    Garage Door Opener Interrupter Cup

    Part #33356A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Screw for Genie 1020L - Part 5973Q04

    Garage Door Opener Screw

    Part #5973Q04

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Motor Cover for Genie 1020L - Part 35573A

    Head diagram

    Motor Cover

    Part #35573A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Chain Spreader for Genie 1020L - Part 33045A

    #NI04

    All parts diagram

    Garage Door Opener Chain Spreader

    Part #33045A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Drive Shaft for Genie 1020L - Part 33353A

    Head diagram

    Garage Door Opener Drive Shaft

    Part #33353A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Worm Gear for Genie 1020L - Part 33355A

    Head diagram

    Garage Door Opener Worm Gear

    Part #33355A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Bolt for Genie 1020L - Part 080105.0506

    Garage Door Opener Bolt

    Part #080105.0506

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Rail Clamp for Genie 1020L - Part 33744A04

    Rail - gcg350l-gcg350ml, h2000, 1020l, 2020l diagram

    Garage Door Opener Rail Clamp

    Part #33744A04

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Stripper for Genie 1020L - Part 33352A

    #NI02

    All parts diagram

    Stripper

    Part #33352A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Garage Door Opener Washer for Genie 1020L - Part 27089A

    Head diagram

    Garage Door Opener Washer

    Part #27089A

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Genie AC Chain Drive Garage Door Opener 1020L FAQs

For most standard residential doors, a 1/2 HP garage door opener is the right fit; choose 3/4 HP when the door is heavier (wood, insulated steel), oversized, or used many times per day. For your Genie 1020L AC chain drive garage door opener, door weight and balance matter more than horsepower alone.

Quick way to choose (what we look at)

  • Door material: hollow steel and aluminum usually work well with 1/2 HP; wood and heavily insulated doors often benefit from 3/4 HP.
  • Door size: typical single doors usually fit 1/2 HP; wide or tall double doors often fit 3/4 HP.
  • Usage: occasional open/close cycles fit 1/2 HP; frequent daily cycles fit 3/4 HP.
  • Door condition: if the door is sticky, noisy, or hard to lift by hand, fix the door first (springs, rollers, track) before upsizing the opener.
  • Drive type: chain drive units like the Genie 1020L handle many doors well, but a heavier door still benefits from more power.

1/2 HP vs 3/4 HP at a glance

If your door is... Better choice Why
Standard single or lightweight double 1/2 HP Plenty of lifting power with less cost and complexity
Solid wood, thick insulated steel, or oversized 3/4 HP More torque margin; smoother starts and less strain
Properly balanced and easy to lift by hand 1/2 HP Balance reduces load on the motor
Used many times daily (busy household) 3/4 HP Better durability under frequent cycling

Before you decide, do this 30-second balance check

  1. Pull the emergency release (with the door closed).
  2. Lift the door by hand to about waist height.
  3. A well-balanced door stays in place or moves slowly.
  • If it drops fast or feels heavy, the opener is compensating for a door problem. Correcting door balance often improves performance more than jumping from 1/2 to 3/4 HP.

Why it matters

Choosing the right horsepower helps your garage door opener run cooler, start and stop smoothly, and avoid premature wear on the motor, sprocket, chain, and internal gears.

For help finding compatible replacement parts by model number, use how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts).

Last updated: February 2026

Garage door opener compatibility comes down to the opener’s radio system and safety features, not the door brand. For a Genie 1020L AC chain drive garage door opener, we match compatibility by confirming the opener’s model/series, the receiver type (learn button vs. DIP switches), and whether photo-eye safety sensors are used.

What to check on your current opener

  • Model number on the powerhead: confirm it says Genie 1020L.
  • Programming method: look for a learn/program button or a bank of DIP switches.
  • Safety sensors: verify photo eyes are installed near the floor on both sides of the door.
  • Remote type you want: replacement remote, universal remote, keypad, or smart controller.
  • Frequency/technology: newer rolling-code systems need a compatible receiver and remote.

Quick compatibility guide (most common scenarios)

What you have now What usually works What usually does not
Learn/program button system Genie-compatible remote/keypad programmed to the opener Random “universal” remotes that do not list Genie support
DIP switch receiver (older style) DIP switch remote matched to the same switch pattern Learn-button remotes without a compatible receiver
Safety sensors installed Most modern openers and smart add-ons Very old openers without sensor support (not recommended)

If you are replacing the entire opener

Use these fit checks before choosing a new unit:

  • Door size and weight: most residential doors use a 1/2 HP class opener; heavier doors often need more.
  • Drive type: chain drive is durable; belt drive is quieter; screw drive varies by brand.
  • Rail length: 7 ft doors are common; 8 ft doors typically need an extension kit.
  • Power and mounting: ceiling height, header space, and existing wiring for wall control/sensors.

Why it matters

Choosing the right compatible system prevents programming failures, intermittent range issues, and safety-sensor conflicts. It also helps you avoid buying a remote or keypad that cannot “talk” to the receiver in your Genie 1020L.

For help confirming the exact model number format and where to find it on the unit, use how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts).

Last updated: February 2026

The most dependable garage door openers are typically chain-drive units from proven brands; for many homes, Genie and LiftMaster chain drives are the durability leaders because the chain-and-sprocket design tolerates heavy use and temperature swings well. Your Genie model 1020L is in that dependable chain-drive category.

What “dependable” means for a garage door opener

Dependability is mostly about consistent lifting power, stable safety sensors, and long-term wear parts (drive system, gears, and electronics) holding up over years of cycles.

Key dependability factors

  • Drive type: chain drives usually last the longest under heavy doors
  • Motor type: AC motors are simple and durable; DC motors are quieter and smooth
  • Door balance: a well-balanced door reduces strain on the opener
  • Safety sensor alignment: prevents nuisance reversals and no-close issues
  • Surge protection and wiring condition: protects the logic board and wall control

Chain vs belt vs screw: quick comparison

| Feature | Chain drive (like 1020L) | Belt drive | Screw drive | |---|---|---| | Long-term durability | Excellent | Very good | Good to very good | | Noise/vibration | Higher | Lowest | Medium | | Best for | Heavier doors, value, longevity | Attached garages, quiet operation | Fewer moving parts, moderate climates |

How to make any opener more dependable

Even a premium opener fails early if the door or hardware is fighting it.

Maintenance that improves reliability

  • Test door balance: the door should stay at mid-travel when released
  • Clean and realign photo eyes; confirm both indicator lights are steady
  • Tighten rail and header bracket fasteners; vibration loosens hardware over time
  • Lubricate door rollers and hinges (not the opener rail unless your instructions specify)
  • Replace worn door rollers or a frayed lift cable promptly

Why it matters

A dependable opener is really a dependable system: opener plus a properly balanced door. When the door runs smoothly, your Genie 1020L chain drive runs cooler, trips less often, and the drive components last longer.

Helpful DIY reference

For electrical troubleshooting that affects opener reliability (intermittent power, bad connections), use our guide: how to repair broken or damaged wires video.

Last updated: February 2026

A Genie garage door opener like model 1020L typically lasts 10 to 15 years. With lighter daily use, a clean and dry garage, and basic maintenance (chain, sensors, and wiring), many openers run 15 to 20 years before major repairs or replacement make more sense.

Typical lifespan ranges (what to expect)

Most AC chain drive openers fall into these real-world ranges:

  • 10 to 15 years: common average for normal use
  • 15 to 20 years: well-maintained units with moderate cycles
  • Under 10 years: heavy use, power issues, moisture, or neglected hardware
  • 20+ years: possible, but usually with increasing noise and intermittent issues
Usage pattern Typical cycles/day Expected lifespan
Light 2 to 4 15 to 20 years
Average 4 to 8 10 to 15 years
Heavy 8+ 7 to 12 years

What shortens the life of a Genie opener

These are the most common lifespan reducers we see with chain drive garage door openers:

  • A garage door that is out of balance (opener works too hard)
  • Dry or loose chain and rail hardware (extra load and vibration)
  • Voltage spikes or frequent outages (board and capacitor stress)
  • Misaligned safety sensors causing repeated reversals
  • Worn door rollers/hinges increasing drag
  • Damaged or pinched low-voltage wiring to wall control or sensors

Maintenance that helps it last longer

A few simple checks make a big difference:

  • Test door balance (door should stay mid-travel when disconnected from the opener)
  • Tighten visible rail and header fasteners (don’t overtighten)
  • Keep photo eyes clean and aligned
  • Listen for chain slap or grinding and correct early
  • Inspect wiring for staples through insulation or brittle spots

For electrical troubleshooting skills that protect the control board and wiring, use our guide: how to use a multimeter to test electrical parts video.

Why it matters

A garage door opener that is nearing end-of-life often still “works,” but it can become unreliable (random stops, reversals, or remote range issues). Catching door drag, sensor problems, and wiring damage early reduces strain on the motor and control board.

Last updated: February 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your garage door openers

Choose a symptom to see related garage door opener repairs.

Main causes: garage door locked, damaged garage door tracks, up-force setting needs adjustment, RPM sensor failure, bad …

Main causes: loose fasteners, broken brackets, need preventive maintenance, worn drive gears, loose or worn belt, loose …

Things to do: check garage door travel, tighten brackets and fasteners, test safety sensors, check travel limits and for…

Main causes: neighbor's remote programmed at the same time as yours, faulty wall control wiring, bad wall control unit…

Main causes: faulty logic control board, bad RPM sensor, broken gears in the drive system, bad drive motor…

Main causes: safety sensor beams blocked, safety sensors not aligned, downforce setting needs adjustment, damaged garage…

Main causes: radio interference, weak remote batteries, sunlight interference with safety sensor beams, safety sensors n…

Main causes: garage door opener misaligned, travel limits need adjustment, bad travel limit switches, faulty logic contr…

Most common repair guides to help fix your garage door openers

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your garage door opener.

How to replace a garage door opener battery

How to replace a garage door opener battery

The garage door won't move during a power outage if the battery is dead. Here’s how to replace it.…

Repair time and Difficulty

 15 minutes or less
How to replace a garage door opener logic board

How to replace a garage door opener logic board

The logic board is the brains of the garage door opener. If the remote doesn't work or the door doesn't open and close p…

Repair time and Difficulty

 60 minutes or less
How to replace a garage door opener drive belt

How to replace a garage door opener drive belt

A damaged or broken belt on your garage door opener could be the reason it won’t move the door. Here’s how to fix it.…

Repair time and Difficulty

 60 minutes or less

Effective articles & videos to help repair your garage door openers

Use the advice and tips in these articles and videos to get the most out of your garage door opener.

Installing a sensor sun shield on your garage door opener video

Installing a sensor sun shield on your garage door opener video

This inexpensive gadget prevents sunlight interference with the sensors.…

Garage door opener remotes won't work video

Garage door opener remotes won't work video

If your remotes don't work, you might need to disable the lock feature, eliminate RF interference or check the batteries…

Easy DIY garage door opener repairs

Easy DIY garage door opener repairs

You can repair your garage door opener yourself. We show you how.…

Parts & More

Bottom-Mount Refrigerator
Camping
Front-Engine Lawn Tractor
Lawn & Garden Engine
Miter Saw
Parts
Refrigerator
Television
Toaster Oven
Vacuum Cleaner
Washer