Ghost Controls Gate Repair in Stanford, CA | Everest Gate Service Santa Clara
Independent Ghost Controls gate repair in Stanford, CA typically runs $180–$420 and is usually completed same-day when parts are in stock. The one thing that makes our Ghost Controls work here different: we’ve spent 12 years navigating Stanford’s university land-lease system, so we coordinate with Stanford Real Estate & Facilities Management before we quote any job that touches posts, excavation, or access-control integration — not after. Call (650) 419-0714 for a free estimate.

Why Stanford Residents Choose Us for Ghost Controls Service
We’re not a handyman service that “also does gates.” For 12 years, Everest Gate Service has handled nothing but gate systems — repair, installation, motors, access control, and structural welding. Joshua Clark, our owner, is the lead technician on every call. He grew up near Rivermark in Santa Clara, trained in electrical and mechanical systems at Mission College on Bowers Avenue, and still lives three miles from where he runs the business. That local root matters in Stanford, where a standard gate repair can stall for weeks if you don’t understand who owns the dirt beneath your fence posts.
We’ve logged hundreds of Ghost Controls repairs across the 94305 ZIP code — from faculty ranches off Cabrillo Avenue to research facility driveways near Campus Drive. Our 131 verified five-star reviews reflect that consistency: neighbors recommending neighbors. “If I wouldn’t put it on my own fence, I’m not recommending it to yours” — that’s the standard Joshua works by. We carry OEM Ghost Controls parts for control boards and motors, plus quality aftermarket hinges and brackets to keep costs reasonable without cutting corners on the components that matter.
Common Ghost Controls Gate Repair Problems We Solve in Stanford
- Limit-switch drift on TDS1 and TDS2 slide operators. Stanford’s morning fog rolls in from the Bay and condenses inside limit-switch housings, causing gates to slam stops or refuse to close fully. We replaced a TDS1 switch on Cabrillo Avenue where exactly this had happened — then weatherproofed the housing and logged the repair with Stanford Facilities for future pre-approval.
- Motor overheating in Hermetic H-Series units. Faculty housing driveways sit under mature oak canopy, and fallen debris blocks ventilation grilles on exposed operators. We clean, relocate, or add screening to keep airflow moving through these sealed motors.
- Control board terminal corrosion in TDS1 operators near agricultural zones. Seasonal tilling kicks up fine dust that combines with humidity from winter rains, accelerating corrosion on low-voltage connections. We clean terminals, apply protective coating, and replace boards when trace damage has already occurred.
- Gear-box seal failure on TDS2 swing operators. The 1960s–70s duplexes in faculty neighborhoods often have original concrete post bases that settled out of plumb decades ago. Misalignment loads the gearbox unevenly, forcing seal wear. We realign posts when possible, or machine custom shim brackets in-house to save the operator.
- Card reader integration failures. Stanford’s ID Card Services manages transponder systems that must handshake with your Ghost Controls operator. A “simple” motor repair becomes a multi-department coordination when the access-control loop drops. We’ve worked with university IT enough to know who to call before we’re stuck at a locked gate.
Ghost Controls Service in Stanford: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Here’s the Stanford reality that stops most gate contractors cold: Stanford University owns virtually every square foot of land in 94305. Your house sits on a university land lease. That means replacing a gate post requires digging a hole into Stanford-owned soil, and a quick repair can balloon into a three-week wait for Stanford Real Estate excavation approval. We’ve seen competitors quote post replacement as a half-day job, then watch their crews get shut down mid-dig when university inspectors flag the unpermitted excavation.
We handle this differently. Before we quote any post work on a Ghost Controls system in Stanford, we coordinate directly with Stanford Real Estate’s Permits Office. We know the difference between a surface-mounted repair that needs no approval and a subsurface modification that triggers university review. For TDS1 and TDS2 operators mounted to aging posts in the faculty housing tracts, this pre-approval step often determines whether your gate is fixed in one visit or three. We’ve built relationships with the Facilities team that let us log repairs proactively — so the next service call on your address moves faster, not slower.
Ghost Controls Models & Products We Service in Stanford
We work on the full Ghost Controls residential and light-commercial line: TDS1 (single slide), TDS2 (dual swing), TDS3 (heavy-duty single slide), and Hermetic H-Series (weather-sealed swing operators). For control boards and drive motors, we source genuine Ghost Controls OEM components — these are precision-matched to firmware revisions and safety protocols. For hinges, latch brackets, and mounting hardware, we offer quality aftermarket alternatives that meet or exceed factory spec at lower cost.
We stock common TDS1 and TDS2 control boards, limit switches, and gear assemblies locally for same-day Stanford turnaround. Hermetic H-Series sealed motors and TDS3 heavy-duty gearboxes typically ship within 48 hours. If your unit is under 10 years old and the chassis isn’t corroded through, we almost always recommend repair. Replacement makes sense when the housing is compromised or when Ghost Controls has discontinued a model and parts scarcity turns every fix into a treasure hunt.
Ghost Controls Service Pricing in Stanford
| Service | Typical Range in Stanford |
|---|---|
| Diagnostic & tune-up | $180 – $260 |
| Limit switch or sensor replacement | $220 – $340 |
| Control board repair/replacement | $280 – $420 |
| Motor repair or replacement | $320 – $480 |
| Post realignment (no excavation) | $260 – $380 |
| Post replacement (with Stanford approval) | $580 – $840 |
| Card reader/access control integration | $340 – $520 |
Stanford’s land-lease coordination adds time but not hidden cost — we build permit liaison into our standard workflow, not as an add-on. Every estimate is free, itemized, and delivered by Joshua personally. Same-day service is available for most diagnostic and parts-swap calls when we have components in stock. Call (650) 419-0714 for an exact quote on your Ghost Controls system — estimates are free, and we’ll flag upfront whether your job needs Stanford Real Estate pre-approval.
Serving Stanford, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Stanford 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 Stanford
Surface repairs — motor swaps, control boards, limit switches, hinge work — generally don’t require approval. Any work that disturbs soil, replaces posts, or modifies the gate footprint does. We determine this before quoting and handle the permit coordination ourselves. Call (650) 419-0714 and we’ll check your address against our Stanford Facilities contact log.
Condensation inside the limit-switch housing causes contact drift. Stanford’s Bay-driven morning fog is the culprit, especially for operators mounted low where humidity lingers. We replace the switch with an upgraded sealed unit and add moisture protection to the housing. Call (650) 419-0714 for a diagnostic — we stock the sealed switches for same-day repair.
Yes, but it requires coordination with Stanford ID Card Services and often university IT. We’ve integrated Ghost Controls operators with Stanford’s card reader and transponder infrastructure on multiple faculty homes and research facility driveways. The hardware connection is straightforward; the protocol handshake with university security is where experience matters. Call (650) 419-0714 to discuss your specific access-control setup.
The operator can function temporarily, but a cracked post will eventually misalign the gate and load the gearbox unevenly — that’s how TDS2 seal failures start. We assess whether the post can be sister-reinforced without excavation (no Stanford approval needed) or whether full replacement requires university permitting. Call (650) 419-0714 for an on-site evaluation; we’ll know within 10 minutes which path your property requires.
Annual service is the minimum here. The dry-season/wet-season cycle — low humidity cracking wood components, winter rain swelling gates and corroding hardware — creates predictable wear patterns. We recommend a pre-winter tune-up (October–November) and a post-rain inspection (March–April) for any Ghost Controls system in the 94305 microclimate. Call (650) 419-0714 to schedule; we offer maintenance plans that lock in priority scheduling.
Service Areas Near Stanford
We serve Stanford directly from our Santa Clara base, with regular routes through Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Mountain View, Los Altos, and San Jose. Most Stanford calls reach us within 25 minutes during business hours. We’re familiar with the distinct permitting and property structures in each of these neighboring cities — though none match Stanford’s university land-lease complexity.
Book Your Ghost Controls Service in Stanford Today
Joshua handles every Ghost Controls repair personally — from the first phone call to the final test cycle. We’ve spent 12 years building the relationships and technical depth that keep Stanford gate systems running without the permit surprises or access-control dead-ends that derail less specialized contractors. Same-day service is available for most calls when parts are in stock. Call (650) 419-0714 now for your free estimate.
Reviewed by Joshua Clark, Owner at Everest Gate Service Santa Clara, serving Stanford and the South Bay since 2013.