Ghost Controls Gate Repair in San Ramon, CA | Ironclad Gate Repair Service San Francisco
We provide independent Ghost Controls gate repair across San Ramon, including Windemere, Gale Ranch, and Crow Canyon. The one thing that makes our Ghost Controls work here different: we’ve spent eleven years learning exactly how the TSS1 limit switches fry in 100°F Diablo Valley heat and how HOA CC&Rs in 94582 lock down what hardware and finishes you can actually use. Kevin handles it personally—same technician, same day, no runaround. Call (866) 788-1265 for a free estimate.

Why San Ramon Residents Choose Us for Ghost Controls Service
We’re gate-only specialists. Not a fencing company with a side hustle, not a handyman who watched a YouTube video. Eleven years of nothing but gates, motors, and access control—and that focus shows when we’re staring at a Ghost Controls TSS2 that’s throwing false obstruction errors in a Gale Ranch driveway.
Kevin Flores grew up in San Francisco’s Excelsior District, lives ten minutes from the shop, and runs every call himself. His dad ran a repair shop in the Mission, so the standard was set early: you fix it right or you don’t fix it. Over 1,000 neighbors trust us—1,072 verified reviews at 4.8 stars—and that track record exists because Kevin’s the one answering the phone and the one showing up with tools in hand. We stock parts and weld on-site, which matters in San Ramon where HOA approval delays can stretch a two-hour repair into a two-week ordeal if you’re waiting on outsourced fabrication.
We work on your brand. Ghost Controls is one of nine major lines we service, alongside LiftMaster, FAAC, BFT, Linear, Viking, DoorKing, Elite, and Mighty Mule. We’re not manufacturer-authorized, and we don’t pretend to be. Our credibility comes from knowing these machines inside and out—the specific capacitors that bulge, the drive gears that bind, the limit switches that quit when the thermometer hits triple digits.
Common Ghost Controls Gate Repair Problems We Solve in San Ramon
- TSS1 limit switch failure from thermal cycling. In Windemere, where Shapell and other builders installed hundreds of matching driveway gates between 2001 and 2007, the TSS1’s limit switches are dying in clusters. San Ramon’s inland heat—regularly 20 degrees hotter than coastal East Bay—causes the internal contacts to warp and lose calibration. The gate reverses mid-swing or stops six inches short. We’ve replaced dozens of these in 94582 alone, and we carry the OEM switches on the truck.
- SSS1 drive gear housing corrosion from salt and fog. San Ramon gets dry summer bake followed by fall fog drip rolling over the Diablo Range. That moisture settles on slide gate hardware and starts corrosion inside the SSS1’s gear housing. Rack-and-pinion binding follows. The motor runs but the gate crawls, or stalls entirely. We disassemble, clean, and re-lube with marine-grade grease, or replace the housing if the pitting’s too deep.
- Elite series capacitor failure on aging builder installs. Those 2001–2007 Elite actuators in Windemere and Gale Ranch are now well past their design life. The electrolytic capacitors bulge or leak, starving the motor of startup current. It hums, it clicks, it doesn’t move. We test in-field, replace with matched spec capacitors or full aftermarket boards for discontinued models, and verify amperage draw under load before we leave.
- TSS2 magnetic sensor misalignment from Diablo winds. Seasonal wind events hit swing gates with sudden lateral force. The TSS2’s obstruction sensor—magnetic, sensitive to gate position—reads that jolt as a blockage and reverses the gate. We realign the sensor, adjust the sensitivity threshold, and check hinge wear that lets the gate rock in the first place.
- Hinge seizure and bolt failure from thermal expansion. Twenty years of 100°F summer expansion and winter contraction seizes hinge pins and elongates bolt holes in aluminum frames. The gate sags, drags, or jams. We cut out seized hardware, weld repair elongated holes when needed, and rehang with anti-seize compound so the next technician—maybe us in five years—doesn’t need a torch.
Ghost Controls Service in San Ramon: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
San Ramon’s master-planned DNA shapes every repair we do here. Windemere, Gale Ranch, Crow Canyon—these aren’t neighborhoods that grew organically. They’re products of 1990s and 2000s development where builders specified gates as standard amenities, often with identical hardware across hundreds of homes. That uniformity is a double-edged sword: we know exactly which capacitors are failing in which year-range of Elite actuators, but we also know that every repair runs through an HOA architectural committee that cares deeply about powder coat color, bracket finish, and whether that replacement hinge matches the original spec.
Here’s the San Ramon-specific wrinkle that generic repair pages won’t tell you: in Gale Ranch and Crow Canyon, builder-installed Ghost Controls gates from the late 1990s frequently have non-standard post spacing. The custom ironwork packages those developments sold—ornamental scrollwork, wider infill patterns—required wider or narrower swing arcs than the standard TSS1 bracket set could accommodate. Installers improvised. Twenty-five years later, we’re inheriting those improvisations. We carry adjustable mounting brackets and a portable welder to fabricate adapters on-site, because ordering a “standard” replacement and discovering the posts are 3/4-inch off center means a second trip, and nobody in San Ramon has time for that—especially when the HOA wants the work done before the next board meeting.
That same inland heat that fries limit switches also warps wooden infill panels on gates that face south or west. We’ve seen TSS2 openers strain and fault because the swollen wood drags against the jamb, not because the motor’s failing. Diagnose wrong, replace a $400 opener, and you’ve solved nothing. We check the obvious first.
Ghost Controls Models & Products We Service in San Ramon
We service the full current Ghost Controls residential line and most legacy hardware still running in San Ramon’s 1990s–2000s housing stock:
- Ghost Controls TSS1 Swing Gate Opener — the workhorse in Windemere builder packages; limit switches and control boards are our most common repairs
- Ghost Controls TSS2 Heavy-Duty Swing Opener — larger gates in Gale Ranch custom lots; magnetic obstruction sensors need seasonal recalibration
- Ghost Controls SSS1 Slide Gate Opener — community entry gates and rear-lane access in Crow Canyon; drive gear and rack alignment are typical issues
- Ghost Controls RLS1 Linear Gate Opener — less common in San Ramon but present on some commercial-adjacent HOA entries
We use OEM Ghost Controls parts when available—exact fit, factory warranty on components, no compatibility guesswork. For discontinued models, particularly early Elite series drives that Ghost Controls no longer supports, we source quality aftermarket alternatives like Gemini replacement boards. Our honest stance: if the motor windings test good and the gear train isn’t chipped or cracked, we repair. We replace only when the mainboard’s fried beyond component-level service or the drivetrain’s worn past mesh tolerance. “If I wouldn’t put it on my own gate, I’m not putting it on yours.”
We stock capacitors, limit switches, drive gears, and control boards for the models we see most in 94582 and 94583. Same-day completion is normal, not exceptional.
Ghost Controls Service Pricing in San Ramon
Most Ghost Controls repairs in San Ramon fall between $180 and $450, depending on what’s actually wrong. Here’s how that breaks down:
- Diagnostic and service call: $85–$125 (credited toward repair if you proceed)
- Limit switch or sensor replacement: $180–$280 (parts + labor)
- Capacitor or control board replacement: $220–$380 (OEM boards at higher end, quality aftermarket for discontinued units)
- Drive gear or motor rebuild: $320–$450 (includes disassembly, cleaning, re-lube, reassembly, and load testing)
- Hinge rehang or weld repair: $200–$400 (varies with access and whether we need to fabricate brackets for non-standard post spacing)
HOA documentation and photo requirements add no charge—we’ve done enough San Ramon jobs to know what Windemere’s architectural committee wants to see. Every estimate is free, itemized, and given before work starts. No approval needed from us to decline. Call (866) 788-1265 for an exact quote on your specific Ghost Controls system.
Serving San Ramon, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the San Ramon 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 San Ramon
Yes, a partially opening TSS1 in San Ramon is most often a failed limit switch from thermal cycling in our 100°F summers. For the HOA question: most San Ramon HOAs require pre-approval for any visible hardware change, but a direct component swap (same part, same finish) usually qualifies as maintenance, not modification. We photograph before and after, document part numbers, and provide whatever your architectural committee needs. Call (866) 788-1265—we’ll walk you through the HOA piece during the estimate.
Usually something else. Binding at a consistent point indicates track debris, roller wear, or rack misalignment—mechanical, not motor. The SSS1 motor will overwork and eventually fault, but replacing it won’t fix the binding. We clean the track, inspect rollers for flat spots or corrosion from fall fog drip, and realign the rack. Motor testing comes after the gate moves freely. Call (866) 788-1265 for same-day diagnosis.
The TSS2 doesn’t have a dedicated “wind mode,” but its magnetic obstruction sensor has adjustable sensitivity. We reduce the sensitivity threshold so brief wind gusts don’t trigger false stops, then inspect hinges and posts for wear that lets the gate rock excessively. Sometimes the fix is mechanical—tighter hinges, not electronic tweaks. Kevin handles it personally, and we’ll test under real conditions before we leave.
Yes. For that era of Ghost Controls hardware, we match capacitor specs in-field and source quality aftermarket control boards when OEM replacements are discontinued. We’ve revived dozens of 2001–2007 builder installs in Crow Canyon and Windemere. The motor itself is often fine; it’s the supporting electronics that age out. We’ll test the full system and give you honest numbers on repair versus replacement. Call (866) 788-1265 for a free estimate.
We handle it by asking first, documenting everything, and matching finishes exactly. Most San Ramon HOAs—particularly in Gale Ranch and Windemere—maintain approved vendor lists and color charts for powder coat and hardware. We carry common HOA-specified finishes on the truck, photograph all existing components before removal, and provide part number documentation for your submittal package. No surprises at the inspection. Call (866) 788-1265 and we’ll confirm your specific HOA requirements when we schedule.
Service Areas Near San Ramon
We run regular service calls from our San Francisco base into the Diablo Valley and surrounding East Bay communities. Nearby areas we cover include Daly City, South San Francisco, and neighborhoods throughout San Francisco proper—Visitacion Valley, Noe Valley, and the Mission District. San Ramon sits at the outer edge of our standard service radius, but we’ve built enough repeat relationships in Windemere and Gale Ranch that the drive time pays for itself.
Book Your Ghost Controls Service in San Ramon Today
Gate’s stuck halfway, clicking but not moving, or throwing errors every time the wind picks up? We’re the gate-only specialists who know Ghost Controls hardware and San Ramon HOA reality. Kevin handles it personally, parts are on the truck, and we weld on-site when your 1990s custom post spacing doesn’t match any catalog bracket. Same-day service is available throughout 94582 and 94583. Call (866) 788-1265 now for your free estimate.
Written by Kevin Flores, Owner at Ironclad Gate Repair Service San Francisco, serving San Ramon and the Bay Area since 2014.