Ghost Controls Gate Repair in Corinth, TX | Everest Gate Repair Service Dallas Fort Worth
Independent Ghost Controls gate repair in Corinth typically runs $180–$520 depending on whether you’re looking at a limit-switch reset, a full motor swap, or post-footing work after clay soil shift. We’re Everest Gate Repair Service Dallas Fort Worth — not a Ghost Controls authorized dealer, just the crew that’s fixed over 200 of their units in Corinth since 2018. Dennis Price, our owner and lead technician, handles the diagnostics personally. Call (855) 914-8517 for a free estimate, same-day in most cases.

Why Corinth Residents Choose Us for Ghost Controls Service
We’ve been crawling under Ghost Controls operators in Corinth’s subdivisions long enough to know the difference between a failed motor and a gate that’s simply racked out of plumb from Denton County’s black gumbo clay. Dennis Price grew up near the Stockyards district in Fort Worth and learned his electrical fundamentals through Tarrant County College’s Industrial Technology program — he’s the guy who shows up with a multimeter and a jack, not a sales folder.
Eleven years specializing exclusively in gates means we’ve seen every Ghost Controls failure mode that crops up in Corinth’s 1990s–2010s housing stock: bent TSS1 arms from post-heave, G-Series gearbox stripping on heavy ornamental iron, chain tensioners backing off slide operators after wet springs. We carry genuine Ghost Controls OEM parts — limit switches, gearboxes, control boards — and we weld, wire, and fabricate in-house. When your HOA’s Architectural Review Committee wants a form submitted before we touch visible hardware, we bring that paperwork with the estimate. Seven hundred and seven neighbors have left reviews averaging 4.8 stars. If Dennis can’t tell you exactly what’s wrong before he quotes you, he’s not doing his job.
Common Ghost Controls Gate Repair Problems We Solve in Corinth
- TSS1 swing operator arms bending after clay soil heave. Corinth’s black gumbo swells dramatically in wet springs and shrinks hard through July and August. A gate post that migrates even 1.5 inches puts lateral stress on the TSS1’s aluminum actuator arm. We see this every May in subdivisions along the I-35E corridor — the arm isn’t broken, it’s fatigued from fighting a misaligned frame. We jack and repour the footing, realign the gate, then replace the arm if it’s creased.
- GHOST1 slide operator chain tensioners loosening seasonally. The repeated expansion-contraction cycle of Corinth’s expansive clay soils works chain tension hardware loose over 12–18 months. The gate starts jamming mid-travel, and homeowners assume the motor’s failing. Usually it’s a 20-minute tension reset and a lock-nut upgrade — but we also check whether the track itself has shifted, because treating a track problem as a chain problem guarantees a callback.
- TS-1 motor brush failure on high-cycle HOA entrance gates. Corinth’s master-planned communities run entrance gates hard — 200+ cycles daily on some I-35E corridor properties. The TS-1’s brushed DC motor wears commutators faster than the residential duty cycle suggests. We stock OEM brush assemblies and can swap them same-day, but we’ll also be straight with you: if the armature’s scored, replacement makes more sense than a third brush change.
- G-Series gearbox stripping on heavy ornamental iron gates. The 1990s subdivisions that define Corinth’s housing stock installed substantial wrought-iron and steel driveway gates to HOA spec. The G-Series residential slide operators specified for some of those original installations were under-torqued for the actual gate mass. We see stripped nylon gears where the motor ran but the gate barely moved — and we can either rebuild with an OEM steel gear upgrade or spec a properly rated replacement.
- Hail-dented panels causing binding on automated gates. Denton County’s April–May hail season dents lighter-gauge steel and aluminum gate panels enough to throw off slide clearance or swing geometry. A Ghost Controls operator that’s “mysteriously” tripping its obstruction sensor in spring usually isn’t the sensor — it’s a panel edge catching the jamb. We straighten or replace panels, then recalibrate limits.
Ghost Controls Service in Corinth: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Here’s the thing about Corinth that generic gate repair pages won’t tell you: this city’s HOA Architectural Review Committees (ARCs) often require written approval for any visible gate modification, including replacing a Ghost Controls keypad or painting an operator housing. We’ve watched homeowners get fined because a previous technician swapped a keypad for a different color without submitting Form AR-17 — or whatever their specific neighborhood calls it. We always accompany our estimate with the ARC submission packet, a step that prevents callbacks and fines.
The clay soil is equally specific. In Corinth’s Canyon Falls subdivision and similar 76210 neighborhoods, we’ve learned to budget 30–45 minutes per estimate just to check post depth and footing condition. A TSS1 that “failed” in June probably started heaving in March. Last spring we serviced a unit in Canyon Falls that couldn’t close fully — the gate had racked 1.5 inches out of plumb after the rains. We jacked the post, repoured the footing with deeper gravel base to combat clay heave, welded a reinforcement plate to the hinge, and reprogrammed the TSS1’s limit switches. The gate cycles smoothly now, and the ARC approved our color-matched powder coat on the operator housing. That’s Corinth work — not generic gate repair with a ZIP code slapped on.
Ghost Controls Models & Products We Service in Corinth
We work on the full Ghost Controls residential and light-commercial line: TSS1 single and dual swing operators, TS-1 slide gate operators, GHOST1 slide systems, and the G-Series residential sliding gate operators. Dennis stocks OEM limit switches, control boards, gearboxes, and actuator arms for same-day repair on most Corinth calls. When a motor’s clutch or gearbox has failed after a decade of service — common in Corinth’s original 1990s–2000s installations — we’ll recommend replacement honestly, because band-aiding a worn unit often exceeds the cost of a new operator. We don’t upsell; we diagnose. Our “your brand, our expertise” approach means we’re factory-experienced across nine opener lines, so we understand Ghost Controls’ specific programming sequences and safety behaviors rather than guessing across brands.
Ghost Controls Service Pricing in Corinth
Most Corinth Ghost Controls repairs fall in these ranges:
- Diagnostic and minor adjustment: $180–$240 (limit switch reset, chain tension, safety sensor alignment)
- OEM parts replacement: $280–$420 (actuator arm, control board, gearbox assembly)
- Post repair/repour with gate realignment: $380–$520 (clay soil heave recovery, footing reset, structural welding)
- Motor replacement (unit + labor): $650–$1,100 (varies by model and dual-vs-single configuration)
What drives cost: parts availability (we stock Ghost Controls OEM locally), whether the gate frame needs welding or realignment, and if we’re coordinating ARC submission before work begins. Every estimate is free, itemized, and includes the ARC paperwork if your neighborhood requires it. Call (855) 914-8517 — Dennis will walk through what you’re seeing and give you a straight range before we roll.
Serving Corinth, TX — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Corinth 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 — Ghost Controls Gate Repair in Corinth
It’s usually post-heave from clay soil shrinkage, not motor failure. Corinth’s 100°F+ summers dry the black gumbo clay, causing gate posts to tilt and bind the TSS1’s travel path. The operator’s obstruction sensor is doing its job — it’s detecting real mechanical resistance. We check post plumb first, then test the arm. Call (855) 914-8517 for a free diagnostic; we’ll tell you if it’s a $200 realignment or a motor issue.
Most Corinth subdivisions require written ARC approval for any visible modification — keypads, operator housings, even powder-coat touch-ups. We bring the submission forms with our estimate and build that lead time into the schedule. Skipping this step has cost homeowners fines and forced re-work. Call (855) 914-8517 and we’ll confirm your neighborhood’s specific requirements.
Seasonal soil movement in Corinth’s expansive clay works tension hardware loose through thermal and moisture cycling. We upgrade to locking hardware and check track alignment — a shifted track puts side-load on the chain that mimics looseness. Annual maintenance prevents the jamming that burns out your motor. Call (855) 914-8517 to schedule before the next wet season.
Yes — we source color-matched powder coat for Ghost Controls housings and work with local applicators who understand Corinth HOA color palettes. We include the finish sample in our ARC submission so there’s no approval delay. For older units where the original color’s discontinued, we’ll show you the closest match before application.
Most repairs finish in 2–3 hours on-site. If we need to coordinate ARC approval first, add 3–7 business days for submission and response. Post-footing repours require a 24-hour concrete cure before we can tension and program the operator. We’ll give you the full timeline when Dennis quotes the job — no surprises. Call (855) 914-8517 to check same-day availability.
Service Areas Near Corinth
We run Ghost Controls calls throughout Denton County and the broader Dallas-Fort Worth metro: Irving and Grand Prairie to the south, Euless and Farmers Branch for mid-cities access control work, and Coppell for residential swing and slide operators. Same-day service often extends to these areas depending on call volume.
Book Your Ghost Controls Service in Corinth Today
Eleven years, one specialty. Dennis Price handles the diagnostics personally — no subcontractors, no guesswork. If your Ghost Controls gate is binding, clicking, or stopped dead in Corinth’s heat, we’ll get it sorted. Same-day appointments available most weekdays. Call (855) 914-8517 or request your free estimate now.
Written by Dennis Price, Owner at Everest Gate Repair Service Dallas Fort Worth, serving Corinth and the greater Fort Worth area since 2013.