Bracing Part 2 of 2

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Komentáře • 52

  • @chrismalchoff7552
    @chrismalchoff7552 Před 3 lety +3

    I learned a simple technic as a you man. #9 wire one loop around posts with a tightening stick of locust. Just twist the loop and rest the stick against by rail. Quick and cheap. We had tractor mounted post driver in the late 60s

  • @derekmichael5710
    @derekmichael5710 Před 8 lety +1

    great explanation of the process! Thanks for the help

  • @jimrodgers7042
    @jimrodgers7042 Před 9 lety +3

    Great explanation and simple to follow. Thanks

  • @mcgregorco
    @mcgregorco Před 8 lety

    Thanks for the help !

  • @rdlamascus
    @rdlamascus Před 10 lety +5

    Very good video. Zooming in on the handling of wire crimping and threading of high tinsel wire into the tensioners would have been more helpful. Also, zoom on the pin instillation for cross brace posts into the vertical posts would have been nice.
    Thanks, Rick - Tennessee

  • @ronalines
    @ronalines Před 10 lety +14

    I place my top brace pin a little differently. I almost drive it in flush but I leave it out 1/2" and it makes a nice place to land the brace wire as I wrap it around twice. The brace wire is placed on top of the pin and is pulled down as tension is applied. Stronger than a staple and holds stout.

  • @speedydry
    @speedydry Před 3 lety +2

    I use lag screws, not staples on brace wire. Will not work loose. I like to use three posts with 2 horizontal braces for all long fences, like the video.

  • @gabriellabuba
    @gabriellabuba Před 15 lety +2

    Dude this is very helpfull and a well done video

  • @RedBrandAgFence
    @RedBrandAgFence  Před 11 lety +5

    Wrapping the brace wire twice adds strength. The most important part of your fence are the braces.

    • @c.w.hughey2728
      @c.w.hughey2728 Před 2 lety +1

      YES VERY IMPORTANT GOOD BRACING STRONG FRNCE

  • @cos1463
    @cos1463 Před 14 lety +2

    Thanks a lot, very helpful. Good videos.

  • @timrogers4604
    @timrogers4604 Před 6 lety

    There are a few ways to build h-braces. Here is the way we do it - czcams.com/video/iB79QFMOmb4/video.html

  • @eledaedumers7961
    @eledaedumers7961 Před 9 lety +1

    great vid

  • @Coffeeandasmoke
    @Coffeeandasmoke Před 12 lety +1

    Good vid. Thank you.

  • @PlayhardStudios1
    @PlayhardStudios1 Před 11 lety

    thanks guys great video helped me heaps

  • @markthompsoncpa
    @markthompsoncpa Před 4 lety

    That's one nice pole barn!

  • @timlebsack
    @timlebsack Před 7 lety +1

    What are the advantages of using smooth brace pins vs. lag screws ??

  • @lydite-fence
    @lydite-fence Před rokem

    Wow, thats a great video, thank you.
    If need any electric fence products, you can choose lydite

  • @nobueno8652
    @nobueno8652 Před 11 měsíci

    My mistake was using 12.5 gauge sleeve on a 12 gauge brace wire which didn’t crimp the wire well together and slipped and detached when I tighten on my strainer. My local tractor co didn’t have any 14 gauge sleeves.

  • @CnHoltzman1
    @CnHoltzman1 Před 6 lety +1

    so you didn't comment on whether to set the pin a little higher on the corner most post so as to avoid hitting the other pin? Looks like you didn't double the wire as you did in the first video. did you mention the different in pin lengths, five inches and ten inches?

  • @knightsedge7379
    @knightsedge7379 Před 4 lety +1

    This is very professional.
    Most tension wire I've seen is a strand of barb wire with a short stick that you twist until tight.

    • @c.w.hughey2728
      @c.w.hughey2728 Před 2 lety +1

      YOU CAN BARB WIRE INSTEAD OF SMOOTH WIRE ALSO FOR AN AGRSSIVE FENCE ONE BARB WIRE UNDER THE WIVEN WIRE AND 2 OR 3 ON TOP

  • @hillybeaner9689
    @hillybeaner9689 Před 11 lety +1

    It doesn't add strength at the ends of the wire it adds strength as a whole to lessen stretching. I'm not a physics expert I just know what works in the field from experience.

  • @jasonkirk3166
    @jasonkirk3166 Před rokem +1

    I can't find the brace pins. Where can I find them?

  • @hillybeaner9689
    @hillybeaner9689 Před 11 lety +2

    I do have one suggestion. Not trying to be an expert but the double h brace would be stronger and take the weight of say a cow or calf running into the fence better if it was braced with the wire contradicting on the posts from bottom center to both top sides on the outside posts. The pull from an animal hitting the fence on the side of the brace that the most pull is already on can loosen after a while or maybe even break posts off if they are pulled too tightly in one direction.

  • @NickButters61
    @NickButters61 Před rokem

    what is the recommended length of a fence to require a double h brace?

  • @skd5432
    @skd5432 Před 4 lety

    At some important tasks like pin insertion etc.... closeup shots could have helped....better.

  • @jamesdawsoningalls
    @jamesdawsoningalls Před rokem

    Every how many feet is a brace needed?

  • @jamesallen1907
    @jamesallen1907 Před 6 lety +1

    We don't crimp it we just wrap it and it works out just as good

  • @davidjustice4029
    @davidjustice4029 Před 7 lety +7

    it would have helped if the camera was a little closer to the work.

    • @Cotronixco
      @Cotronixco Před 3 lety

      It was perfect. I hate zoomed recordings. Zoom in yourself or get a bigger monitor.

  • @mrpush2532
    @mrpush2532 Před 3 lety

    Couple questions.
    1. Why would you measure down from top of posts andThe. up from the ground which is where the ht of fence is determined? I could see this is OK if you got every post to the same ht...but we know in real life this never happens.
    2. In that corner post, if the holes are not offset by some distance the pin holes and pins would hit each other. I didn't hear any mention of that? Are they offset by some distance?
    Thx.

    • @blockededited8280
      @blockededited8280 Před 2 lety

      1. Watch the previous videos and you'll see how they set the posts at the same height.
      2. Use your head. Either drill your second hole at an angle to miss the first or just move it down 1/2 in or so, in which case you drill your hole in the end of your horizontal a little lower to compensate and no one is the wiser.

  • @MrFrozensmoke
    @MrFrozensmoke Před 4 lety

    Is this for the middle of the fence? Or can the same technique be done for the corner post without doing an N brace.

    • @brandoncaldwell95
      @brandoncaldwell95 Před 3 lety

      This is end to corner sections. Around where i live its a pipe and 2 nails for the top. The tension wire has a pipe between the posts thats twisted tensioning the wire.

    • @MrFrozensmoke
      @MrFrozensmoke Před 3 lety

      @@brandoncaldwell95 i did H braces on the corners, with tension making the N.

    • @MrFrozensmoke
      @MrFrozensmoke Před 3 lety

      Almost a year ago now.

  • @Cotronixco
    @Cotronixco Před 11 lety +1

    Are you talking about the twisting that posts get after awhile on most fences, which keeps loosening the fence? I always terminate on the inner post of the H instead of the outer for two reasons: 1) to keep the wire centered so no post twisting occurs over time, and 2) to distribute the pull evenly between the two posts, instead of having almost all the pull on the end post. It is simple to then fill in between the posts. You can even lag some 2x's across as a climber.

    • @chrismalchoff7552
      @chrismalchoff7552 Před 3 lety +1

      Correct. Don't stretch from the corner
      Ever. In the Northeast, staple every 6th post tight. The rest are loose

  • @ShadowSwayze
    @ShadowSwayze Před 3 lety +1

    anyone watching in 2021

  • @readynet4983
    @readynet4983 Před 7 lety

    Hello ; is mortar mix a no no?

  • @user-fo3pr3oq5j
    @user-fo3pr3oq5j Před 5 lety

    钢丝多粗??

  • @fingersoup
    @fingersoup Před 10 lety

    Me too. =/

  • @danielrussell2713
    @danielrussell2713 Před 7 lety

    At a gate in the middle of a straight run, how do you run the wire? I would set posts on either side of the gate, then one more on either side to brace with.
    Maybe this will help get my point across:
    ___ ___
    ----------------------- | | GATE | | -------------------
    A). \ /
    B). / \
    C). X X
    Which way should wire run? A, B, or C?

    • @booifojoe
      @booifojoe Před 6 lety

      On all multiple choice tests, I always go with, "All of the above." My answer is "D".

    • @andrewbohnert3755
      @andrewbohnert3755 Před 6 lety +2

      B. Because the weight of the gate will pull the top of the post inward, so there needs to be a wire holding the top of the post back.

  • @rvp1948
    @rvp1948 Před 13 lety +1

    The "gear" cost less than $3 .... leave them in.

  • @kaseycasece1340
    @kaseycasece1340 Před 2 lety

    NEVER USE SMOOTH WIRE FOR BRACING WIRE ALL WAY US 4 BARB WIRE FOR CROSS BRACING