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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Hi there
I'm new to the forum so please bear with me and sorry if there's an older thread about this. I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. The fence will only 1.3mt wide, however, it'll be 2.9mt high due to the difference in height between our properties etc. I cant sink the posts due to drainage pipes that run along the side of the house so i reckon i need to attach the posts to the brickwork. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. Is there a way i can attach the post that's next to the house, to the house in a way where i can try and avoid noise coming through? Thanks |
#2
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Jun 9, 10:59*am, Gordon1111
wrote: Hi there I'm new to the forum so please bear with me and sorry if there's an older thread about this. I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. The fence will only 1.3mt wide, however, it'll be 2.9mt high due to the difference in height between our properties etc. I cant sink the posts due to drainage pipes that run along the side of the house so i reckon i need to attach the posts to the brickwork. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. Is there a way i can attach the post that's next to the house, to the house in a way where i can try and avoid noise coming through? Thanks -- Gordon1111 I don't think it will be a problem. But if your neighbours are that bad you need something more substantial maybe? |
#3
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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Gordon1111 wrote:
Hi there I'm new to the forum so please bear with me and sorry if there's an older thread about this. I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. The fence will only 1.3mt wide, however, it'll be 2.9mt high due to the difference in height between our properties etc. I cant sink the posts due to drainage pipes that run along the side of the house so i reckon i need to attach the posts to the brickwork. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. Is there a way i can attach the post that's next to the house, to the house in a way where i can try and avoid noise coming through? Thanks Um, I think you will have problems. We have an idiot neighbour whose side gate (hinge side) was attached to a post planted next to our gable wall. You might think that the banging of an unlatched gate would only reverberate through the latching side but we regularly had to get up at night to latch the fecking thing and it *wasn't* even attached to our wall. In short, if it is attached to your wall, you will get transmitted noise/vibration. It might not be a problem though if they are careful about closing it. Tim |
#4
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sat, 9 Jun 2012 09:59:14 +0000, Gordon1111
wrote: Hi there I'm new to the forum so please bear with me and sorry if there's an older thread about this. I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. The fence will only 1.3mt wide, however, it'll be 2.9mt high due to the difference in height between our properties etc. I cant sink the posts due to drainage pipes that run along the side of the house so i reckon i need to attach the posts to the brickwork. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. Is there a way i can attach the post that's next to the house, to the house in a way where i can try and avoid noise coming through? I'm trying to imagine this and I'm a little puzzled - but bear with me, I get puzzled very easily. First, I come out in hives when I see the words "fence" and "football" in the same sentence because I know from very bitter experience that anything short of absolutely the strongest fence you can imagine will gradually (or not very gradually) fall apart whilst providing the kicker-against with wonderfully satisfying sound effects. I'm also confused about this neighbour's gate. Are you saying that it already slams against a gatepost and you hope the fence will screen some of the noise out or do you mean that when the fence goes in the neighbour's gate will slam against that? Any chance of a few snapshots of the problem (you could post them to tinypic.com or any other photosharing site) so we can better visualise what's going on and what you want to achieve? Nick |
#5
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On Jun 9, 10:59*am, Gordon1111
wrote: Hi there I'm new to the forum so please bear with me and sorry if there's an older thread about this. I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. The fence will only 1.3mt wide, however, it'll be 2.9mt high due to the difference in height between our properties etc. I cant sink the posts due to drainage pipes that run along the side of the house so i reckon i need to attach the posts to the brickwork. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. Is there a way i can attach the post that's next to the house, to the house in a way where i can try and avoid noise coming through? Thanks If you understand that noise is vibration, and know wood is slightly springy, you'll know you can come up with any number of suitable arrangements, depending on the small details of the situation. One exampe is to create C shaped bits and mount the post to the middle of them. The flat strip of the C shape acts like a cartspring. NT |
#6
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Hi there
Thanks to everyone for their replies / advice. Just to offer a bit more info regarding this diy problem - We got a fencing contractor in, when we moved in 4 years ago, and they did a great job installling a 6ft (double slatted) fence right around the whole back garden. The only part they didnt do was the 1.2mt wide section that is between my gable end and the neighbours driveway. The neighbours driveway & house sits about 3-4ft higher than our house and our properties are separated by a retaining wall etc. The fencing contractor installed our fence just behind the coping stones on said retaining wall. When the fence was initially installed, there was a gap at each side, as my side was a pain in the ar*e to do and my neighbours side was a path to their back garden (which they've now put a gate onto etc etc) Normally i would have just sunk the posts into the ground, but due to drainage pipes (that serve the back garden, as the garden is quite steep) i cant do this. My plan was to sink the posts in and leave a 50mm gap between the post and my house wall, then i wouldnt get any noise. So, at the moment, i have a 6ft fence right around my property and a gap at the side which i want to close off. (for the record, it was agreed between the fencing contractor and myself that they would leave this - looking back he probably knew it would be hassle. They wanted to attach the posts to the house but i said no, so we left the gap etc) Dont get me wrong, my neighbours are great, and its only occassionaly the gate slams or a ball gets knocked against the fence, but dont want to be sitting there and here the "thud / thud" noise. I was going to buy those post clamps that you screw down but then i would need to prepare a solid concrete "plinth" for these to be bolted to, and the ground is just gravel so it would take a bit of work. However, i have thought of something, rather than connecting the whole structure, i could do the following - 1. Install a post to the gable of my house (using screws or bolts etc) 2. Install the 2nd post to the retaining wall (as above) 3. Then fit rails and boards, but do not connect anything to the fence thats existing. (i could leave a gap of even 20mm) The fence would be solid as it would be supported by the side of the house and a sold 3-4ft retaining wall. Surely this solves my problem??? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. And sorry for rambling on about this! G |
#7
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Gordon1111 wrote:
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. And sorry for rambling on about this! A photo or two would be a big help. Tim |
#8
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Jun 11, 9:42*am, Tim wrote:
Gordon1111 wrote: Any advice would be greatly appreciated. And sorry for rambling on about this! A photo or two would be a big help. Tim yep! |
#9
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A photo or two would be a big help.
Tim[/i][/color] yep![/quote] Hi Sorry, forgot to attach a picture. Will take one tomorrow morning and get back to you. |
#10
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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Gordon1111 wrote:
I'm looking to build a fence between a neighbours wall and the side of my house. Parallel with the wall? So you have two boundary features, the existing wall and a new fence alongside it? Changing from: | house |------------ | to | house |============ | The fence will only 1.3mt wide, millitons? Or do you mean metres - 1.3m ? And do you actually mean 1.3m /long/ ? A 1.3m wide fence is a shed. The only fear i have is that i may get noise / vibration coming through the fence into the house (living room is next to it), from my neighbours gate slamming or kids kicking the ball against it. On which side is the height difference? Is your land lower than your neightbour's or higher? I'm finding it hard to picture your neightbour's brats kicking a football past the existing wall and across the height difference to hit the fence. JGH |
#11
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![]() Quote:
The fence will indeed be 1.3mt wide, as the figure of 1.3mt (or 1300mm) is the gap between the retaining wall and the side of my house. So basically, you have my neighbours house then the 6ft high fence we put in to separate the properties (which sits on the top of the retaining wall), then a 3-4ft drop into my garden, then a gap of 1.3mt and you're at my gable end etc. Hopefully this makes sense. I've attached another picture. |
#12
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On Wednesday, 13 June 2012 16:01:27 UTC+1, Gordon1111 wrote:
My neighbours property sits about 3-4ft higher than mine. The fence will indeed be 1.3mt wide, as the figure of 1.3mt (or 1300mm) is the gap between the retaining wall and the side of my house. So basically, you have my neighbours house then the 6ft high fence we put in to separate the properties (which sits on the top of the retaining wall), then a 3-4ft drop into my garden, then a gap of 1.3mt and you're at my gable end etc. Sorry. This is very pedantic ... The SI symbol for the unit called "metre" or "meter" is "m"; not "mt". mt would be a unit "t" (which is the metric tonne aka 1000kg), with a prefix "m" (implying "milli" - one thousandth). Thus "mt" means the same as "kg". |
#13
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Sorry. This is very pedantic ...
The SI symbol for the unit called "metre" or "meter" is "m"; not "mt". mt would be a unit "t" (which is the metric tonne aka 1000kg), with a prefix "m" (implying "milli" - one thousandth). Thus "mt" means the same as "kg".[/quote] Thanks for clearing that up. I hope that everyone knows what i meant anyway. |
#14
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