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Repair & Parts Guide

Vertical Blind Repair: Vanes, Carriers, Stems, Chains, and Tracks

Vertical blinds have several replaceable parts, but the track is a coordinated mechanism. A broken vane is different from a stripped carrier, disconnected spacer, damaged control, or warped headrail. Identifying the exact failure saves time.

Vertical Blind Repair: Vanes, Carriers, Stems, Chains, and Tracks

Common symptoms

  • One vane falls out
  • Vanes will not rotate together
  • The blind will not traverse
  • Carriers bunch or separate
  • The control chain or wand does not work

Safe checks before ordering parts

  • Inspect the hole or hanger at the top of the vane.
  • Look for a broken carrier stem rather than twisting it further.
  • Confirm all vanes face the same direction before traversing.
  • Match replacement carriers and vanes to the existing track.

Repair or replacement considerations

Vanes, stems, chains, weights, and some carriers can be replaced. A worn or obsolete track may justify replacing the complete system or choosing panel tracks, roller shades, drapery, or shutters.

Safety note: Do not force controls, work above your ability, bypass cord-safety devices, or improvise brackets and electrical repairs. Follow product-specific instructions.

Common questions

Can I repair a torn vane hole?

Repair clips exist, but matching replacement vanes provide a cleaner result.

Why do the vanes cross each other?

The carriers may be out of alignment, or the blind was traversed while closed.

Are all carrier stems the same?

No. Profiles and attachment methods differ.