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On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 12:32:06 PM UTC-7, Terry Coombs wrote:
leza wang wrote: On Tuesday, July 15, 2014 1:28:25 PM UTC-4, Terry Coombs wrote: leza wang wrote: One side of my house is overlook an Alleway (cars can drive). I want to build a fence similar to this one (click on the link below please) http://tinypic.com/r/24n2yja/8 My house is in similar situation of the picture above (instead of the green, my house is there). Of course the fence is going to be build on my property side. I want a protection fence like the one in the picture because I am afraid in the Winter cars might slip and hit my house. I started working and dig to install the Posts. There will be 6-8 post and the distance between them is 6' feet. My question, should I install the first post (put the gravel first and then concorete) and then wait to dry and then try to install pther post so I can use the first one as a bench mark when I try to make sure they all post are layed on the same level and the hight are the same. I thought it is good idea to do that. What do you think Thanks a lot. I think you should drive a pair of pegs and stretch a string to establish your line . Use a level to plumb your posts , set 'em a bit high and cut to height after mounting the top stringer . Cut the tops at an angle to shed water or they'll rot . And your concrete needs to be finished slightly above ground and sloped away from the post for the same reason . -- Snag Thanks for your reply. Can you please tell me what do you mean by ".. should drive a pair of peges"? I also want to ask, my post will be 4f high, is it ok to burry 1f of the post or more (like 1.5 f or 2 f)? Thanks a lot. Put a peg in the ground at each end of where you want your fence , and tie a string tightly between them . THis will establish a straight line to guide your pole placement . I use 8 foot treated 4x4 posts they're dead cheap - bury them a *minimum* of 24" deep , depending on the frost line in your area . -- Snag If what I posted is really that hard to understand , you should probably hire somebody to build your fence . Better practice is to set the two end post and then stretch a string. You're gonna have to restretch the string using those two end posts anyhow. Harry K |
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