Fencing Land Has Anyone...

/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #1  

bravo2zero

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I am about to start fencing in about 30 acres of land. I found a a new fencing product and was wondering if anyone has used this type of fencing.
I like the white T-POST and the entire look. No rust and very clean. But the corner braces are the only thing that question me. Anyone have any comments too are welcome to post in. It cost more than traditional setup(s) but I looked over the material this afternoon. It was sharp looking but.... I can't find any reviews on this product. So before I take the plunge, I was hoping to hear some feedback from you guys.

Corner Braces:
4 H-Post Set (6' x 7')

It is a tad expensive but nice looking and last for a very long time as advertised.

T-POST
6.5' X 1.75 " T-Post

And here is a video of the young fellow putting up a corner brace.

Timeless Fence System corner installation - YouTube
Videos
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #2  
I am about to start fencing in about 30 acres of land. I found a a new fencing product and was wondering if anyone has used this type of fencing.
I like the white T-POST and the entire look. No rust and very clean. But the corner braces are the only thing that question me. Anyone have any comments too are welcome to post in. It cost more than traditional setup(s) but I looked over the material this afternoon. It was sharp looking but.... I can't find any reviews on this product. So before I take the plunge, I was hoping to hear some feedback from you guys.

Corner Braces:
4 H-Post Set (6' x 7')

It is a tad expensive but nice looking and last for a very long time as advertised.

T-POST
6.5' X 1.75 " T-Post

And here is a video of the young fellow putting up a corner brace.

Timeless Fence System corner installation - YouTube
Videos

My neighbor is a lineman for AT&T. We had a conversation once about plastic fencing. He said he sees a lot of that stuff while working around the county. It looks fine and burns real nice in the summer during triple digit temperature season when someone inadvertently sets the super dry weeds in the ditch on fire.

If you like the T-post look, get real T-posts and use railroad ties for the corners.

Good luck.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone...
  • Thread Starter
#3  
The reason I was looking at this option is the coloration (white). Real steal T-POST rust and look horrible in my opinion. All the fencing I have done on our land previously is done with wood post and wood corner braces. I use Hi-Tensile wire (electrical). So with a fire, even real post will burn. Thank you for the comment.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #4  
We use plastic T post for bracing trees after planting. The ones we use are black and quite flexible. To flexible to drive with a post pounder, without breakage.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #5  
We use plastic T post for bracing trees after planting. The ones we use are black and quite flexible. To flexible to drive with a post pounder, without breakage.

How do you drive them in then?
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #6  
The reason I was looking at this option is the coloration (white). Real steal T-POST rust and look horrible in my opinion. All the fencing I have done on our land previously is done with wood post and wood corner braces. I use Hi-Tensile wire (electrical). So with a fire, even real post will burn. Thank you for the comment.

The chinese steel they make them out of now days seems cheaper too.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #7  
What are you keeping in?
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #8  
My experience with the white plastic rail fencing is dirt and the environment turns it black Nasty looking after awhile plus it does get brittle with age and in the cold as well as the hollow square posts are wasp and yellow jacket nest heaven. 7 bucks a t post for plastic posts I don't know if I could be sold on that. My fences are all wood 4x4 with t posts in between. No climb red brand wire horse fence with one strand of barbed wire at the top. Cross ties for corner posts.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #9  
Pics

Had to include a pic of the quarter horse too lest she read this and get jealous.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone...
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I am not keeping anything in on this location of the land. I plan to hay, and thats it. Nice pictures of your fencing. I can't seem to find anyone that uses this product. You do drive them in with a hammer or fence post hammer, and they will not break. I looked them over today. It is a heavy duty type PVC composite.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #11  
Seems to me the solution would be to dip the steel T posts into that plastic and coat the part that goes into the ground. Mine rust off.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #12  
I have pulled up T-post that have been in the ground 20 years and other than some bad surface oxidation, they were still solid. White PVC is not going to work for long in sunlight. It will be brittle in a few years and start to turn to powder a few years later. I don't know how you could drive them as they claim unless you have mud or soft sand. Around my area, you have to really pound on a steel post. NO WAY would I try to use that setup for corner post. PVC is just too flexible to use for anchoring a long stretch of fence.
You seem determined to use them, so have at it but be prepared to replace them in a few years and buy some extra for when a rabbit runs into your fence in winter and pops off a post.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #13  
Oh , if you are looking at the white post for aesthetic reasons, buy a couple gallons of white enamel paint and paint the steel post, it will last much longer than those cheap (cheap made recycled plastic that is) junk that cost double what a good steel T post cost.

We have used some of the plastic post with a steel tip on the end for electric fence wire and they break very easily and I doubt the plastic T post are any stronger, however the main drawback on white plastic is sunlight deterioration. Any plastic that is exposed to UV light needs to have a color UV blocker in it. White plastic can only be used underground or under roof as it becomes extremely brittle is 2-3 years which is what happens to the plastic electric fence post. After a couple years of exposure, they get really brittle and break when even a little bend is put on them.

There is a good reason that you don't see a lot of reviews on plastic post, either square hollow or even the T post, that is because 1) they chalk up and don't last in UV light and 2) they are too expensive.
The theory of no rot is good, but they do rot. Just not in the traditional sense of wood. They rot (oxidize) from UV light just like all other plastic. Bury them in the ground and they last a millennium or more but not above ground.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #14  
The reason I was looking at this option is the coloration (white). Real steal T-POST rust and look horrible in my opinion. All the fencing I have done on our land previously is done with wood post and wood corner braces. I use Hi-Tensile wire (electrical). So with a fire, even real post will burn. Thank you for the comment.

Railroad ties will scorch a little, but are pretty difficult to burn completely in a grass fire. The fencing (metal T-posts, farm fencing, barbed wire)on my place used railroad ties that are scorched near the bottom 12-18 inches--evidence that one of the previous owners experienced a grass fire. I took all that crappy, old fencing down years ago since the wire was pretty much shot. Pulled the old T-posts out of the ground and gave them to a neighbor to cross fence her place.

My place is a corner parcel, 10 acres perfectly square (660 ft, one furlong per side). I have fencing on two sides thanks to my neighbors. On the South side my new neighbor put up real nice goat fencing for his herd. And on the West side, my neighbor has strung a couple of strands of electric wire to keep her horses (actually large pets) from straying. The North and East sides front on the road so there is no reason for fencing there since I don't graze any animals on my place.
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone...
  • Thread Starter
#15  
I am not adamant on purchasing this product. The last thing I want is to be out on the land in a couple years replacing post. I more or less was trying to get input and to see if anyone has used this product. I have always used wood and it last for several years.

You are right about the corner post. I wouldn't try it, not with the tension that I put on the lines and I wanted to thank everyone that posted it was appreciated.

I am going to stick with what I know best. Wood works and it looks nice too!
 
/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #16  
My only experience was with the vinyl picket fence products. I put up a 4 foot high by 200 feet long picket fence around my yard at my old house 9 years ago. Fence still looks good today. I live there for 5 years and never replaced ay components. Talked to the current owner this winter and he has not replaced any components yet either.
 

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/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #18  
I agree with Gary, I can't see a PVC corner post holding much on anything and I wouldn't try it. I mainly use an H brace with one large pole cut from the butt end of an old utility pole. The sizes range from 12 to 20 in, I put them 3 ft in the ground and pack them with a mixture of concrete (dry) and dry sand. I try to let them settle for a few days before pulling wire, but I still get a little movement after the first pull.

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/ Fencing Land Has Anyone... #20  
And no, this is not my concrete fence post. But it does look like it has been there a long time. It looks like they ran the rebar too close to the ends where it rusted and the concrete spalled off.
 

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