fence

How to build fences

Filed under: How to build fences — Tags: — Peter @

Fence may be useful for several things, such as privacy, weather barrier, and containment for children or just for decoration. Your imagination is the only thing that limits the design. Can I get some good ideas when you’re looking at other fences in your neighborhood, or if you are looking in magazines at home. Also contact the city or residential association to make sure that there is no provision for building fences.

Setting your fence. The basic theory is that they go where your fence and stretch string between them. This will be a guideline when installing posts. If your fence starts with your house, you probably like to have it at right angles. This is a simple procedure for obtaining these rights. First, the location where you want your fence to begin with. Fasten down the stake and stretch it out roughly at right angles to your house. Measure from the 1.5 meter out the string and mark it. Mark the point on your meter from a house share. Hold the tape measure diagonally from one-meter mark and 1.5-meter mark and move the string until the distance between the marks in the 2-meter.

Tie your string here, and would be perpendicular to the house. Mark your position first, then measure for the line to mark the rest of jobs. Thee must be set outside this post, so you have to measure a series of city. Mark this to share, so you can see. If your fence goes down the mountain you have two options, you can have top rails that the slope of the hill or maintain the level of the fence sections and step rails on each mail. If you want to step down a fence, to assess the amount differs from the top and bottom of the hill and divided that number by the number of sections. And you get the amount of step-down at every fence post.

Digging holes. You can switch your digger to dig postholes but it is very difficult to rest and have a lot of holes if you have difficulty, they could rent a power auger, but you normally have to be two people to run it. In most areas you must have postholes below the frost line to make sure that the job stays in place on the floor begins to frost heaves. As a guideline you should bury about half of the corner posts and about a third underground line post.

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