Sea Speed said:
B-1 83 said:
Rule number one for fences: Never poor boy a fence
This should help you on solid design:
https://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/api/CPSFile/29884/382_TX_PS_Fence_2021
Yea I'm not intending to go cheap, I just don't need fancy or ornate. Was thinking of something like this.
What are you trying to contain? I've built all of my own fences and have consulted all manner of documents and experts. The one referenced by B1 is good. Every single one is still standing. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that corner. If they did the corner well and the deadman well, that fence will pull 7 strands of high tensile horse fence for three decades and keep going. I know that because I've built them exactly like that and had horses and cows test it. In fact, for horse fence, that's the preferred design. It will absolutely hold a little old 12 ga barbed no problem, depending on run length of course. That said if you're doing barbed wire then I prefer H braces on my corners.
There is not anything wrong with a board fence either. But again, if you are containing cattle that's one thing, horses are another. Your soil and animals will dictate your options. I have horses and cattle and will under no circumstances use barbed. I go barbless cable due to cost but I prefer a vinyl coated high tensile horse fence, it's strong, easy to maintain, etc, but it's pricey. None of this matters for cows if that's your primary animal.
If you want cost effective and good, go with 6 strand barbed with h braces on your corners and double braces as needed. If it's a perimeter fence, then I'd incorporate wood or heavy line posts occasionally, check the document for specs. I just use t posts but those are only for pens and cross fence.
Fence building is all about physics. You can build a braced corner out of 4" posts that will pull half a mile of fence better than a poorly built brace out of 12" corners and 6" brace posts. Size matters but not as much as bracing it properly. If you can couple size and technique, it'll last forever.
Every thing else is right in the thread. Spend time and money now and the rest of your life will be minor maintenance and upkeep and not catastrophic rebuilds.