I'm wanting to build a 3 or 4 rail ranch fence along the front of my property. I had 2 - 14' electric gates installed last year with metal gate posts set in concrete. I'm wanting the fence posts to 4x6 treated posts and use 1x6x16' corral boards for the rails and top plate.
I'm not a fan of setting treated wood fence posts in concrete. I want to terminate the fence at the 4 metal gate posts which means digging post holes with a tractor auger next to the gate posts. This seems like I'm taking a big chance that the gate will lean when the hole is dug. I know I can crib up the gate to take the weight off and mitigate the chance of the gate post leaning.
Should I dig all the way up to the concrete around the gateposts and pour sack concrete for the terminating fence posts? I'm kind of concerned that the old post and new post concrete won't bond, giving it a poker chip effect. Any ideas? Not sure if I'm over thinking this or not?
My fence will be about 300' long. I can build it for just under $2000. The local fence builders want $4800 for the job. I hate having to use the local fence company that built my gates. They took 6 months to get them in and had to redo their first few sorry attempts. The gate posts, at first weren't even lined up with the road and old fence-line. Then the first two gates were about as straight as my longbow.
I'm not a fan of setting treated wood fence posts in concrete. I want to terminate the fence at the 4 metal gate posts which means digging post holes with a tractor auger next to the gate posts. This seems like I'm taking a big chance that the gate will lean when the hole is dug. I know I can crib up the gate to take the weight off and mitigate the chance of the gate post leaning.
Should I dig all the way up to the concrete around the gateposts and pour sack concrete for the terminating fence posts? I'm kind of concerned that the old post and new post concrete won't bond, giving it a poker chip effect. Any ideas? Not sure if I'm over thinking this or not?
My fence will be about 300' long. I can build it for just under $2000. The local fence builders want $4800 for the job. I hate having to use the local fence company that built my gates. They took 6 months to get them in and had to redo their first few sorry attempts. The gate posts, at first weren't even lined up with the road and old fence-line. Then the first two gates were about as straight as my longbow.
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