I have an up and coming project to build a cattle guard and wanted to ask depth question. I’m putting this in a gate that’s 16’ wide so my width will be 16’ but, I’ve seen bulls jump a cattle guard before and was thinking 7’ or 8’ length would make them second guess jumping the crossing.
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It depends how hot the heifers are on the other side. Just kidding. I believe 8 foot would be sufficient but they may try it anyway. Bulls in love are not very smart. Neighbor came home one day and his favorite roping horse was standing in his cattle guard belly deep. You might consider spacing the pipes closer together to keep the bulls feet from going through the cattle guard. You may have early unwanted calves but you won't have a bull with a broke leg. Just my 2 cents...
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Originally posted by Draco View PostA beer can is the perfect spacing for the pipes. 7' should be plenty. Most pipe comes in 31' pieces so if you build the wings on the ends of the cattle guard you could get by with getting 2 pipes out of every stick of pipe and have 0 waste with your 16' of width.
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A little known trick to keep animals from walking the c/g is to paint the first pipe white, the next two black, and keep alternating colors all the way across. It makes it look like a big space and they won’t step on it. I can’t prove that it works, but what do you have to lose ?
I know you can put some thin steel on each side over the pipe runners where the cows would first step. I’ve seen that work.
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Built a BUNCH of them over the years for oilfield. Eight feet wide. 12 pipes if 2 7/8 top pipe, 13 pipes if doing 2 3/8 top pipes. I still have the channel iron spacers I used. I used a variety of bottom runners, from I beam and casing pipe, No smaller than 5 1/2inch. Most were around 15 feet wide, so you could cut the threads and couplers off 32 foot joints and still get 2 top rails.( you can leave them on, but ugly...) 5 "sleepers" or bottom runners. That puts a bottom runner near where the weight of most trucks will be centered. I built some with tapered bottom runners that could be just laid down on the ground with no dirt work, too. And the top gets a 2x1/4 flat strap on each side to prevent the pipes from "rolling" and possibly breaking the welds.Last edited by softpoint; 06-04-2021, 12:23 PM.
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