jumbo Posted May 27, 2023 Posted May 27, 2023 Have a fence with concrete precast poles 10 x10 . 2 meter long of which 1 meter in concrete so very sturdy, 2.50 meter apart I want to extend them I guess buying similar poles and fixing them to the existing pole would be a solution But are there extenders for this??? Or what would be an easier or better solution? thnaks
sometimewoodworker Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 1 hour ago, jumbo said: Have a fence with concrete precast poles 10 x10 . 2 meter long of which 1 meter in concrete so very sturdy, 2.50 meter apart I want to extend them I guess buying similar poles and fixing them to the existing pole would be a solution That is the only way to do the job apart from replacing the posts with taller ones. 1
jumbo Posted May 28, 2023 Author Posted May 28, 2023 Thanks I cant' find extenders so I will need to drill them together? Some cement glue and bolts or screws.. I think zip fasteners through existing holes will not have the longevity?
VocalNeal Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 I think most precast poles have holes every 200mm for the purpose of securing fence wire. So said holes could be used to simply bolt on other posts to make it higher. I.e. 2m. 20mm/3/4" square steel tube bolted into said holes using expanding anchors. 1
CharlieKo Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 4 hours ago, jumbo said: Or what would be an easier or better solution? Just replace the poles with the size you want. Your idea of fixing two poles together will not work. 1
VocalNeal Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 37 minutes ago, CharlieKo said: Just replace the poles with the size you want. Your idea of fixing two poles together will not work. Why not the holes will line up.???? Asking for a friend. But yes, we do need a photograph for aesthetic reasons.
Kwasaki Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 5 hours ago, jumbo said: are there extenders for this??? Or what would be an easier or better solution? We extended our with channel steel from Global. 1
IvorBiggun2 Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 Quote The problem is that the old posts may not be in that deep and could be made without any reinforcing in them. So if you extend the height, in high winds it may snap or topple over.Old style fence concrete posts used to have holes in them for wire but you use could also use them to fix timber to. The modern ones have to be drilled which can cause them to shatterI would probably be inclined to pull them out and fit new ones https://community.screwfix.com/threads/extending-concrete-fence-posts-to-add-trellis.208173/
Popular Post sometime Posted May 28, 2023 Popular Post Posted May 28, 2023 What i would do is purchase 6 inch plastic water pipe cut to the height you want the fence.Drill holes where you want the wire to go through . insert rod bigger than the fence wire. slide the pipe over the fence post fill with concrete, after a few hours remove the rods so you now have holes for the fence wire leave the plastic pipe in place & then paint, it gives the post a good solid look. in the photo is 6 inch pipe filled with concrete 3
CharlieH Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 Depends really on position and purpose as to the best easiest way. Middle of a field, start again, perimeter fence to adjoining property you could use a steel extention fixed to concrete existing post. A sleeve over and re-pour as suggested is also a nice finish. Application and position and cosmetics will dictate the deal method.
CharlieKo Posted May 28, 2023 Posted May 28, 2023 8 hours ago, VocalNeal said: Why not the holes will line up.???? Asking for a friend. But yes, we do need a photograph for aesthetic reasons. About the only way it would work, would be to make a metal sleeve about 60cm long with holes drilled to line up with the holes on the poles. But it would look awful. Besides the actual cost of replacing the poles for the size wanted wanted would not cost the earth. If the OP is thinking of bolting the poles to the side of the existing poles. I doubt the existing poles would support the weight. And would look equally awful.
jumbo Posted May 30, 2023 Author Posted May 30, 2023 On 5/28/2023 at 11:44 AM, CharlieKo said: Just replace the poles with the size you want. Your idea of fixing two poles together will not work. The existing poles are poured in to cement/concrete, little hard to dig them out The part that would look ugly, where I attached the 2 poles, cant be seen as we are adding earth to the land. One meter in earth, consisting of top of old pole and bottom of new pole, and then 2 meter 'new poles'
sometimewoodworker Posted May 30, 2023 Posted May 30, 2023 1 hour ago, jumbo said: The existing poles are poured in to cement/concrete, little hard to dig them out The part that would look ugly, where I attached the 2 poles, cant be seen as we are adding earth to the land. One meter in earth, consisting of top of old pole and bottom of new pole, and then 2 meter 'new poles' Keeping the relevant details to yourself when asking questions is rather bad form, to say the least, it means that the answers cannot actually address the situation You haven’t given any information about the current poles. If they are the standard precast poles then the reinforcement is likely 3mm, if so then they can hold up on compression but are useless against a bending force of any reasonable amount. So however you join the poles they have a good chance of snapping the shorter ones, this will be even more likely if the shorter ones are using the minimum cement and the concrete has been mixed with too much water (this is extremely likely as you can get a smoother look, but only ¼ or less of the possible strength) TLDR only you know the details so advise given has not got enough detail. Best advice is bite the bullet and dig the old posts out.
Kwasaki Posted May 30, 2023 Posted May 30, 2023 3 hours ago, jumbo said: The existing poles are poured in to cement/concrete, little hard to dig them out The part that would look ugly, where I attached the 2 poles, cant be seen as we are adding earth to the land. One meter in earth, consisting of top of old pole and bottom of new pole, and then 2 meter 'new poles' What about the otherside finish look of the fence once you infill the ground.
CharlieKo Posted May 30, 2023 Posted May 30, 2023 10 hours ago, jumbo said: The existing poles are poured in to cement/concrete, little hard to dig them out The part that would look ugly, where I attached the 2 poles, cant be seen as we are adding earth to the land. One meter in earth, consisting of top of old pole and bottom of new pole, and then 2 meter 'new poles' So break off the old posts without digging out the foundation, and start over from scratch. Your idea is going from bad to worse. Remember you have to allow the new earth to settle trough the rainy season.
jumbo Posted June 1, 2023 Author Posted June 1, 2023 On 5/30/2023 at 8:45 AM, sometimewoodworker said: Keeping the relevant details to yourself when asking questions is rather bad form, to say the least, it means that the answers cannot actually address the situation You haven’t given any information about the current poles. If they are the standard precast poles then the reinforcement is likely 3mm, if so then they can hold up on compression but are useless against a bending force of any reasonable amount. So however you join the poles they have a good chance of snapping the shorter ones, this will be even more likely if the shorter ones are using the minimum cement and the concrete has been mixed with too much water (this is extremely likely as you can get a smoother look, but only ¼ or less of the possible strength) TLDR only you know the details so advise given has not got enough detail. Best advice is bite the bullet and dig the old posts out. My apologies, it was not done on purpose.
jumbo Posted June 1, 2023 Author Posted June 1, 2023 On 5/30/2023 at 10:42 AM, Kwasaki said: What about the otherside finish look of the fence once you infill the ground. That is another thing I didnot discuss yet. Currently the fence pole is 2.50 of which half in concrete base. The other half to which I want to connect the new pole of 3 meter will be under the ground when I have leveled the earth with which we increased/heightened the land. Then the double pole would show just a tiny fraction of itself. And this will be covered with cowboy fence and plants. We have no neighbors, on either side, so the other side is not an issue, but taken care of anyway 1
sometimewoodworker Posted June 1, 2023 Posted June 1, 2023 3 hours ago, jumbo said: My apologies, it was not done on purpose. No apology required, for future reference if you give every detail possible it is unlikely to be too much, things that seem obvious and unnecessary to mention probably are relevant. A point to remember is that you probably need to explain it as if the audience is blind, we actually are because we can’t see what you can see and have no knowledge of your intended plans. Since the point at which you intend to join the two poles will be buried my personal choice would be to use a section of concrete pipe (probably a meter or meter and a half) around the two posts and fill that with concrete as well as bolting the posts together, this will provide reinforcement to the original post and the connection along with reducing the bending force on the original posts, I have used this as a decorative accent for some of our building i
jumbo Posted June 1, 2023 Author Posted June 1, 2023 Thanks, I will take all advises in account and will make a decision based on the information Thanks again all
sometime Posted June 1, 2023 Posted June 1, 2023 7 minutes ago, jumbo said: Thanks, I will take all advises in account and will make a decision based on the information Thanks again all Keep us informed
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