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Howard Neil wrote:
wrote:

How does/can/should one knock half-round fence posts into the ground
so they end up vertical?

Is there some rule of thumb for the angle one has to start at to end
up with a vertical post or what?

I'm knocking them in with a standard 'post hammer' (not sure what
they're called, i.e. a heavy piece of tube with handles. The problem
is that, unlike a round post, a half-round one has a built in tendency
to deviate from vertical the further it is driven into the ground.

With the current wet weather we're having it's an ideal time to do a
bit of fence refurbishment but I've run out of round posts and I'd
like to use up the twenty or so half-round ones I have.


The straightness relies a lot on the accuracy of the hole that you make
with the fencing bar. If you have not got one of these, it is a bar that
is about 30mm in diameter and about 2 metres long. Most have a point at
one end and a flattened section at the other. Drop the pointed end into
the ground and use a circular motion with the bar to enlarge the hole
and move stones out of the way. Keep doing this until the hole is more
than about 300mm deep.

OK, thanks, I'll try this approach.


Then drop the post into the ground and hit it with the maul (the post
hammer). Every few hits, stop and walk away several yards and check it
for straightness (this check is more effective from a distance). Check
from two directions at 90 degrees from one another. Keep correcting the
angle of the post.


How does one correct the angle of the post? In my experience (in our
ground anyway) there's no way I can move it.


When the post is solidly in the ground, check again.
This time, if it is not vertical, find a suitable stone (wedge shaped is
ideal), push the post upright and insert the stone into the gap left at
ground level. Knock the stone in until level with the ground.

As above, there's no way with 18" or so of post in the ground that any
amount of wedging stones down the side is going to move it at all. I
tried this approach with some that I put in a few weeks ago, I even
left a length of 4x2 pushing against the post to hold it straight
overnight (or longer) but the posts in question are still well out of
vertical.

I will try the fencing bar approach though, that may well be the
answer.

--
Chris Green