Mighty Mule Gate Repair in Richland Hills, TX | Everest Gate Repair Service Dallas Fort Worth
We provide independent Mighty Mule gate repair throughout Richland Hills, Texas, with same-day service available for most calls to 76180. What sets our Mighty Mule work apart here is simple: we fix the post before we replace the motor. In Richland Hills, a Mighty Mule operator that “failed” nine times out of ten just needs its post reset deeper into the clay that keeps shifting it out of plumb. Call (855) 914-8517 for a free estimate — Dennis Price handles the diagnosis personally.

Why Richland Hills Residents Choose Us for Mighty Mule Service
Dennis Price grew up near the Stockyards district and never really left — he’s been fixing gates in this city his whole life. After learning the trade through Tarrant County College’s Industrial Technology program, he spent years on everything from hinge replacements to full underground operator overhauls. Eleven years later, he’s still the one who shows up when your Mighty Mule stops working.
We don’t swap brands on you. We stock OEM Mighty Mule control boards, limit switches, and actuator arms, but we’re also carrying heavy-duty steel hinges and post sleeves fabricated in-house — because Richland Hills gates need both. Our 707 verified reviews averaging 4.8 stars come from being the crew that diagnoses an intermittent electrical fault instead of selling you a motor you don’t need. “If I can’t tell you exactly what’s wrong before I quote you, I’m not doing my job.” That’s how Dennis works every job in Richland Hills.
Common Mighty Mule Gate Repair Problems We Solve in Richland Hills
- FM500 limit switches drifting after post lean. The FM500’s mechanical limit switch rides on an actuator arm that needs precise geometry. When Richland Hills’ clay heave tilts your alley post 2–4 inches, that arm misses the switch entirely. We see this every spring and late summer in 76180 — the gate opens fine, then stops short, or slams the stop. We reset the post to 36 inches, replace the switch assembly, and recalibrate.
- MM571 actuator arm binding on corroded tubular steel. Richland Hills’ 1960s–70s chain-link and tubular steel rear gates weren’t built for powered operation. The MM571’s linear actuator needs a square, plumb mount. After decades of Tarrant Regional hard water rust and February 2021 freeze damage, the gate frame itself twists. We weld reinforcements, grind the mount flat, or fabricate a custom bracket — in-house, same day.
- E-Series slide motor overheating from mineral buildup. Tarrant Regional’s moderately hard water leaves calcium on track rollers. The E-Series motor works harder, runs hotter, eventually faults on thermal overload. In Richland Hills, this shows up mid-July when the clay’s cracked hard and the gate’s already dragging. We descale the track, replace worn rollers with sealed bearings, and check motor amp draw.
- GTO/PRO receiver board failure from voltage spikes. Old Richland Hills ranch homes still have 1950s–60s alley wiring with loose connections and shared neutrals. The GTO’s control board sees 140V spikes, loses its learned remotes, or dies entirely. We install surge suppression, verify ground integrity, and replace with OEM boards — not universal clones that forget your remotes every power flicker.
- Post lean causing repeated “ghost” obstruction faults. Mighty Mule’s safety systems detect resistance increase. A post tilted 3 degrees puts constant side-load on the operator. The control board reads this as an obstruction and reverses. Homeowners in Richland Hills replace two motors before someone checks the post with a level. We check the post first.
Mighty Mule Service in Richland Hills: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Richland Hills sits on the Fort Worth Prairie’s expansive shrink-swell clay soils — the kind that heave gates out of plumb every wet-dry cycle. Here’s what makes this ZIP different: the alleys were laid directly on that original clay without engineered fill. Front yards got some grading attention. Alleys didn’t. So the asphalt base heaves more severely, torquing rear gate posts harder than anywhere else on the property.
That 1959 ranch on Plantation Drive? Perfect example. Rear alley gate, Mighty Mule FM500, kept faulting. The 50-year-old 4-inch tubular steel post had tilted 3 inches from clay heave, bending the limit switch actuator. We repoured a 36-inch-deep concrete footer, sleeved the post, replaced the limit switch assembly, and reset the operator. Cycles clean through wet spring and dry August now.
For Mighty Mule owners in Richland Hills, this means post depth is non-negotiable. Shallow resets — 18 inches, 24 inches — buy you two seasons. We go 30-plus inches minimum on alley gates. The motor’s only as good as what it’s bolted to.
Mighty Mule Models & Products We Service in Richland Hills
We work the full Mighty Mule residential and light-commercial line: FM500 swing operators for single and dual gates, MM571 heavy-duty linear actuators, E-Series slide operators for properties with limited swing clearance, and the legacy GTO/PRO systems still running on older Richland Hills homes.
OEM control boards, limit switches, and remote receivers ship from our Fort Worth stock. For structural hardware — hinges, latches, post sleeves, weld-on actuator brackets — we fabricate heavier-gauge steel locally. Mighty Mule’s factory hinges handle normal conditions. Richland Hills clay isn’t normal. Our parts handle the torque.
We don’t authorize or affiliate with the manufacturer. We’re independent. That means we fix what you have instead of pushing a new system.
Mighty Mule Service Pricing in Richland Hills
Most Mighty Mule repairs in Richland Hills fall between these ranges:
- Diagnostic & tune-up: $95–$145
- Limit switch or control board replacement: $180–$340
- Actuator arm repair or replacement: $220–$395
- Post reset with 36-inch concrete footer: $450–$750
- Full operator replacement with post work: $1,200–$1,850
What drives cost? Depth of post work, whether the gate frame needs welding reinforcement, and if we’re matching existing access controls. Every estimate starts with a free on-site inspection — Dennis Price handles the diagnosis himself. Call (855) 914-8517 to schedule. We’ll tell you exactly what’s wrong before we quote.
Serving Richland Hills, TX — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Richland Hills 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 — Mighty Mule Gate Repair in Richland Hills
It’s usually the post. In 76180, clay heave tilts alley posts 2–4 inches seasonally, which throws off the limit switch geometry on FM500 and MM571 units. The motor runs fine; it just thinks it’s hit an obstruction. We check post plumb first, every time. Call (855) 914-8517 — estimates are free, and we’ll tell you which it is before we start.
We can almost always repair them. Richland Hills’ original 1950s–70s gates are simple steel — we cut off corroded hinges, fabricate heavier-duty replacements in our shop, and weld them to sound frame members. Full gate replacement is rare unless the tubing itself is rotted through. We’ll show you the difference on-site.
February 2021’s ice storm cracked or loosened antenna connections on GTO/PRO and early FM500 receiver boards. Moisture got in. We see this constantly in old Richland Hills ranch homes where the control box sits on a tilted post with compromised gaskets. Usually it’s a receiver board replacement plus resealing — not a full system.
30 inches minimum, 36 preferred for alley gates in 76180. The original 1950s–70s posts were set shallow on undisturbed clay. We go below the active shrink-swell zone and pour a bell-shaped concrete footer. Two seasons of data from Richland Hills jobs: 24-inch resets fail again. 36-inch holds.
We warranty our workmanship and OEM parts for one year. Post movement from new clay heave is a separate issue — we warranty the post installation itself (footer depth, concrete cure, sleeve weld), not geological forces beyond our control. We do design for them, though. That 36-inch depth is our hedge against the clay. Call (855) 914-8517 to discuss what’s covered on your specific job.
Service Areas Near Richland Hills
We run Mighty Mule service calls daily through 76180 and surrounding cities: Irving to the east, Euless and Grand Prairie to the southeast, Farmers Branch and Coppell up toward Dallas. Same-day availability varies by route — Richland Hills and central Tarrant County are our home territory.
Book Your Mighty Mule Service in Richland Hills Today
Call (855) 914-8517 now. Dennis Price answers directly or returns calls within the hour. Same-day Mighty Mule repair is available most days in Richland Hills. Free estimate, upfront pricing, and we’ll fix the post before we sell you a motor.
Written by Dennis Price, Owner at Everest Gate Repair Service Dallas Fort Worth, serving Richland Hills and Fort Worth since 2013.