Cutting up old fencing

   / Cutting up old fencing #1  

rootytoot

Member
Joined
Jul 16, 2008
Messages
49
Location
Western Oregon
Tractor
Ford/NH Model 1920, Allis Chalmers Model G
Hi, I've been cleaning out a lot of old fencing from blackberry bushes on my property. A lot of it just got thrown on a pile and burned (to get rid of posts that were attached to it). This wasn't thought out well by my partner, and so now we have a tangled mass of fencing that is too big to get in a truck, or deal with.

It looks to me like I will need to cut this up into chunks. So, my question is, what tool to use to efficiently cut up a variety of fencing. The hardware store has a variety of implements:

- 14" bolt cutters
- 24" bolt cutters
- wire rope cutters
- angled snips

The fencing is a variety of types: there is some three strand barbed wire, but it is mostly the kind of utility fencing with 5" square openings. Anybody got opinions on this situation?

Thanks,

Kurt
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #3  
Sounds like a tedious pain. When you cut one part, another part is likely to fly at you from some place.

If there is a bunch of it to cut and you have 110v power available, I'd suggest an angle grinder with a cutting disk. Be sure to wear eye and hearing protection. The thin kerf disks cut the quickest.
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #4  
Can you use the FEL to compact it down and then find some way to fold it over and roll it or fold it into a shape that you can then pick up with forks or a loader/backhoe and load onto a triler to haul to a scrapper?
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #5  
I had to do the same thing myself recently. Bolt cutters are great for big wire like in livestock panels, but not so good for barb wire. A barb wire fence tool is OK, but I prefer my Craftsman diagonal cutting pliers which I have had for over 40 years and cut as well today as when I bought them.

Good luck!
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #6  
I use my 18v DeWalt angle grinder with a cut off wheel. VERY quick, and portable.
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #7  
I have a small pair of bolt cutters that work great. I cut the wire off of the posts and then roll it up and stand on it as I go and it mashes pretty flat. If I have quite a bit I use the FEL to compact it. At our local landfill fence is free to dump because it is recyclable. We took some to the local crook recyling place and had to wait in line to get weighed on the way in and on the way out and then he cut the price because he said fence gets tangled in his machine. I would rather give it to the county at the landfill
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #8  
Can you use the FEL to compact it down and then find some way to fold it over and roll it or fold it into a shape that you can then pick up with forks or a loader/backhoe and load onto a triler to haul to a scrapper?

That works for me. :thumbsup:
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #9  
I just burnt a barn down and somewhere under the loft floor was the secret wire storage area. There must have been 10 miles of wire laying in the ashes. I took the tractor and dragged it out onto the open ground and used the grapple to smash it up tighter and tighter and then loaded it on the scrap truck. I didn't think the scrap yard would take wire but the scrap hauler said he would take it. It was much easier that way.
 
   / Cutting up old fencing #10  
Last year I had a big pile of ugly wire after burning old snow fence. I used bolt cutters (18") to cut it into manageable pieces then loaded it into a trailer, mashed it down using foot power and took it off to the metal recycler. A bit of a PITA but it worked:eek:
 

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