This is the first episode in our new 'How We Do It' series! In this series we'll be covering various aspects of fencing and providing handy tips from the experts along the way. Let's do it! 🤩
Hi guys. Great tips! What is the model is post driver you use equipped with those hydraulic levelers? Never seen before. Such a great tool to make post plumb
Hey - you guys are good - nice system, ya must have learnt something when you came over here. Two questions, whats the approx cost of a complete end assembly? Have you considered pre-drilling the post with two opposing holes at ground level (one slightly lower than the other) and driving your picket right through the post? - we do that a lot here with wooden posts as a quick foot. Cheers
What size of plow discs did you use for the stay pads? around 30cm? 35cm? 40cm? Don´t they bend where the stay pushes?? How thick in mm were the discs you used? I ask because i can only get the ones around 35cm where i live. Thanks a lot!!!
Great video, Thankyou... On a 90 degree corner I'm having failed strainers where they are pulling in towards the centre of the paddock Should a corner have an internal stay on then? Thanks.
@@WaltersFencing bit too stoney here for that, wooden strainers at 2.1 metres need a spike hole first to punch through the stones. I used to dig and set 2 sets of strainers and stays a day with a shovel and crowbar before ramming then in, took 1 1/2 hours for each one. One day I did 4 but not again shes hard yakka that many a day. www.nzsoils.org.nz/PageFiles/49/SoilPics/Large/Lismore%20Shallow%20Stony%20Silt%20Loam.jpg
Hey John, thanks for watching. We first saw a tie back stay in a Lyco brochure at Ag-Quip around 25 years ago. I believe a fencing contractor in Victoria came up with the idea. I imagine that all the tie back stays on the market would have evolved from this original idea.
the 23yo one he showed is slightly different to the current waratah version and as his reply to me said he believes a lot of the versions on the market today have evolved from a victorian fencing contractors idea the waratah version is a very good one but is fairly expensive but when compared to concreting and welding the assemblies works out cheaper