Mighty Mule Gate Repair in West Park, FL | Summit Gate Repair Service Miami
Independent Mighty Mule gate repair in West Park typically runs $180–$450 and most jobs finish same-day. What sets our work apart here is the pairing: we know Mighty Mule’s control boards and gearboxes inside out, and we know how West Park’s 1950s–70s wrought iron gates, salt-laced humidity, and flood-heaved posts punish that equipment differently than anywhere else in Broward County. Call (844) 722-6701 for a free estimate — James Wilson handles the job himself.

Why West Park Residents Choose Us for Mighty Mule Service
We’ve been repairing Mighty Mule systems across Miami-Dade and Broward for eight years, and West Park keeps us busy for a specific reason. The 33023 ZIP is packed with original wrought iron swing gates that homeowners want to keep running rather than replace — and Mighty Mule’s FM500 and FM702 operators are what many of them installed ten or fifteen years ago to automate those aging frames.
James Wilson grew up in Hialeah watching his uncle fix anything mechanical by hand, then trained in electrical and mechanical systems at Miami Dade College’s Wolfson Campus before touching his first gate motor in the field. For eight years he’s run Summit Gate Repair Service Miami himself, showing up when he says he will and giving a straight answer instead of an upsell. His two teenage sons now tag along on weekend calls — “mentorship or free labor, depending who you ask.”
We carry OEM Mighty Mule control boards, limit switches, and receiver modules in our van, plus welding gear for the structural repairs these old gates always need. That’s the difference between a technician who swaps a part and one who fixes the gate. We’re not a Mighty Mule authorized dealer or warranty provider — we’re independent specialists who’ve completed their factory training and carry their diagnostic tools anyway.
730+ customers have reviewed us at 4.8 stars. Not a handful of testimonials — real volume from real jobs.
Common Mighty Mule Gate Repair Problems We Solve in West Park
- FM500 control board corrosion. Broward’s inland salt-air humidity — carried on southeast winds from the Atlantic eight miles east — seeps into FM500 enclosures and corrodes traces. The board starts throwing phantom remote signals or auto-reversing for no visible obstruction. We see this constantly in West Park’s older CBS homes where the operator mounts against a block wall with zero airflow.
- FM702 gearbox stripping. When a gate post heaves in saturated limestone-and-fill soil after a summer thunderstorm, the wrought iron frame drags through its arc. The FM702’s gearbox keeps grinding against that misalignment until teeth strip. We realign the post, rebuild or replace the gearbox, and set proper torque limits so it doesn’t happen again next rainy season.
- MM390 limit switch failure from flood surge. West Park’s flat lots flood fast. We’ve pulled MM390 slide gate operators from homes near NW 50th Avenue where storm surge shorted the limit switch housing. Water tables here are shallow — the switch doesn’t need to be submerged, just splashed repeatedly, to fail.
- MM571 receiver board lightning damage. Hurricane season power events fry these boards, especially where shallow grounding can’t dissipate a strike. West Park’s older homes often have original two-rod grounds that were never adequate. We replace the board and evaluate whether the grounding needs upgrading — not because we’re electricians, but because we won’t install a new board to get fried again.
- Sagging pintle hinges on original 1960s gates. The wrought iron itself outlasts the hardware. We weld new pintle pins, bush the hinge eyes, and reset the gate so the Mighty Mule actuator isn’t fighting gravity every cycle. This is standard work for us — we stock steel stock and weld on-site.
Mighty Mule Service in West Park: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
West Park’s 33023 code has no cable TV franchise requirement for gate intercoms, which shapes the access control landscape in a way you’d never guess from a generic product page. Many older homes — like those on 52nd Terrace — run Mighty Mule’s radio-only keypads because there’s no coax infrastructure to support hardwired video intercoms. Here’s the catch: those keypads transmit through 900 MHz or 2.4 GHz signals that concrete block walls with rebar cage attenuate badly. Homeowners call us saying the keypad works fine at the mailbox but won’t trigger the gate from the kitchen, or the range dropped after they repainted and the fresh stucco added another moisture barrier.
We’ve mapped the dead zones in enough West Park CBS homes to know it’s not the keypad — it’s the wall. Sometimes we relocate the receiver antenna to the gate post itself. Sometimes we switch the customer to a wired keypad if they’ll trench a low-voltage line. The point is: a technician who doesn’t know West Park’s housing stock sells you a new keypad you didn’t need. We’ve seen it happen.
That same concrete block construction, combined with the salt-air humidity, creates another West Park-specific failure mode. The FM500’s control board mounts inside a metal enclosure against that block wall. Condensation forms on the back panel, runs down, and pools where the board sits. In frame construction cities, the board breathes. Here, it rots. We drill weep holes and add desiccant packs as standard practice — not because Mighty Mule recommends it, because West Park taught us to.
Mighty Mule Models & Products We Service in West Park
We work on the full Mighty Mule residential and light-commercial line: FM500 swing gate operators, FM702 heavy-duty swing units, MM390 slide gate systems, and MM571 keypad and receiver packages. For each, we stock OEM control boards, limit switches, receiver modules, and remote transmitters — the parts that fail most often and that generic hardware stores don’t carry.
For mechanical hardware on West Park’s period gates, we often recommend quality aftermarket hinges, pintles, and latch sets over OEM. The original 1950s–70s wrought iron frames weren’t built to Mighty Mule specs, and modern OEM brackets sometimes don’t interface cleanly. We fabricate and weld custom mounting plates on-site when needed, or source period-compatible hardware that fits the gate’s original drill patterns. When a frame is too far gone — we’ve seen wrought iron that’s paper-thin from internal oxidation — we’ll recommend migrating to Mighty Mule’s latest linear actuator kits on a new steel or aluminum frame. We’ll tell you straight which path makes sense.
Mighty Mule Service Pricing in West Park
Most Mighty Mule repairs in West Park fall between these ranges:
- Diagnostic & minor adjustment: $180–$220
- Control board or receiver replacement: $280–$380
- Gearbox rebuild or motor replacement: $320–$450
- Gate realignment & hinge welding: $200–$340
- Full operator replacement with new Mighty Mule unit: $850–$1,400
What drives the cost: parts availability (OEM Mighty Mule electronics cost more than aftermarket, but last longer in this humidity), whether the gate needs structural welding before the operator can function properly, and how many return trips we can eliminate by stocking our van right. Every estimate is free, itemized, and given before we start work. No number invented, no pressure applied. Call (844) 722-6701 for your exact quote — estimates are free, and James handles the job himself.
Serving West Park, FL — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the West Park 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 West Park
Waterlogged soil heaves your gate posts, the frame binds in its arc, and the operator’s obstruction sensor triggers. We see this repeatedly after June through September downpours in West Park’s low-lying 33023 lots. The fix is realignment, not a new motor — though if the gearbox stripped while fighting the bind, both need attention. Call (844) 722-6701 and we’ll diagnose whether it’s a post, a hinge, or the operator itself.
Yes, if the frame is structurally sound and we address the sag first. We’ve hung Mighty Mule FM500s on original 1960s wrought iron in West Park after welding new pintle hinges and resetting the post in a deeper footing. The operator doesn’t care how old the gate is — it cares whether the gate moves freely through its arc. If the iron is paper-thin from internal rust, we’ll say so and discuss replacement.
Typically 2–3 years in this climate, less if the battery box sits in standing water after storms. The 12V AGM batteries Mighty Mule specifies handle humidity poorly when submerged repeatedly. We relocate battery boxes above grade when possible, and we keep replacements in stock. If your backup battery fails during a power outage, you’re manually lifting a heavy wrought iron gate. Call (844) 722-6701 for a battery check — it’s a five-minute test.
The radio signal can’t penetrate the rebar-reinforced CBS construction common to West Park’s 1950s–70s homes. This is especially true on streets like 52nd Terrace where there’s no cable franchise for wired intercoms, so homeowners rely on Mighty Mule’s radio-only keypads. We relocate the receiver antenna, switch to a wired keypad with low-voltage trenching, or recommend a cellular-based access system depending on your budget. Call (844) 722-6701 and we’ll map the dead zone.
Repair the gate if the wrought iron frame has solid wall thickness; replace if it’s honeycombed with rust. We’ve rehabilitated gates in West Park that looked hopeless by welding new hinge points and fabricating custom brackets. But we’ve also told homeowners when the iron was too far gone to safely automate. James gives a straight answer either way — “If I can’t fix it today, I’ll tell you why — not next week.” Call (844) 722-6701 for an honest assessment.
Service Areas Near West Park
We run Mighty Mule service calls throughout West Park’s 33023 ZIP and into neighboring Norland, Scott Lake, Andover, Miami Gardens, and Carol City. Same-day availability depends on parts needed — if it’s an FM500 control board or MM571 receiver, we likely have it. If your gate is in Lake Lucerne or the eastern edge of Miami Gardens, we’re typically there within the hour.
Book Your Mighty Mule Service in West Park Today
Your Mighty Mule system doesn’t need a dispatcher in another county — it needs a technician who knows why West Park’s humidity kills FM500 boards and why 52nd Terrace keypads drop signal. James Wilson handles every call himself, stocks the parts, and welds on-site. Same-day service when possible, straight answers always. Call (844) 722-6701 for your free estimate.
Written by James Wilson, Owner at Summit Gate Repair Service Miami, serving West Park and Miami-Dade since 2016.