Victorthesecond
Established Member
Hello everyone. Excuse me if I have this in the wrong section of the forum......and thanks in advance for any replies!
Our garden is surrounded, as many are, by "standard" fence panels consisting of thin, overlapping wood. They slot into concrete fence posts. So far, so good....One of the panels is overdue for replacement but I have two problems......1) It's overhung by a large conifer with many thick branches, all of which means it would be impossible to "slot" a new, 6', panel in. Getting the old one out will be easy - it will just break apart! 2) My neighbour on that side is, let's say, not one that will contribute towards any cost of replacement (to be fair, these are "our" fences) and is, generally, a bit of a misery. The panel I need to replace is largely hidden by shrubbery at "our" side.
I'm thinking that I could replace this panel by simply slotting deck boards (horizontally) into the space. If that looks good, I'm happy to do the other panels in the same way. But, before I do, I just wondered if any of you had done the same type of fence replacement and, if so:
- Did you "space" the horizontally placed deck boards (eg with thin bits of wood at each edge, placed into the slot in the concrete post, or simply let them rest on each other?
- Do you think that deck boards are a decent solution or am I better sourcing some thicker timber (the slots are 45mm wide, and the deck boards I've seen (just by looking at B&Q) are between 20mm and 27mm thick?
- I could get the thinnnest ones but then buy timber to make a batten - my idea was to screw a vertical batten to the bottom board at both sides, slot that in, slide the remaining boards into place, then raise the whole thing so I can secure the top board to the batten, then drop it back into place, thus making the whole thing a little more sturdy.
Ideally, the new fence will last longer than the flimsy thing that is there now (and needs staining every year, yuk) and will be simple to replace as, hopefully, it will simply be a case of sliding any rotten boards out and putting new ones in.
Given that "the space" is 1830mm and the boards I've looked at are either 1800 or 2400, I accept there will be a lot of waste as I will need16 (95mm boards) for this panel (and any others I do). But, who can't use more garden planters!!!
All ideas welcome, thanks in advance!
Take care
Mike
Our garden is surrounded, as many are, by "standard" fence panels consisting of thin, overlapping wood. They slot into concrete fence posts. So far, so good....One of the panels is overdue for replacement but I have two problems......1) It's overhung by a large conifer with many thick branches, all of which means it would be impossible to "slot" a new, 6', panel in. Getting the old one out will be easy - it will just break apart! 2) My neighbour on that side is, let's say, not one that will contribute towards any cost of replacement (to be fair, these are "our" fences) and is, generally, a bit of a misery. The panel I need to replace is largely hidden by shrubbery at "our" side.
I'm thinking that I could replace this panel by simply slotting deck boards (horizontally) into the space. If that looks good, I'm happy to do the other panels in the same way. But, before I do, I just wondered if any of you had done the same type of fence replacement and, if so:
- Did you "space" the horizontally placed deck boards (eg with thin bits of wood at each edge, placed into the slot in the concrete post, or simply let them rest on each other?
- Do you think that deck boards are a decent solution or am I better sourcing some thicker timber (the slots are 45mm wide, and the deck boards I've seen (just by looking at B&Q) are between 20mm and 27mm thick?
- I could get the thinnnest ones but then buy timber to make a batten - my idea was to screw a vertical batten to the bottom board at both sides, slot that in, slide the remaining boards into place, then raise the whole thing so I can secure the top board to the batten, then drop it back into place, thus making the whole thing a little more sturdy.
Ideally, the new fence will last longer than the flimsy thing that is there now (and needs staining every year, yuk) and will be simple to replace as, hopefully, it will simply be a case of sliding any rotten boards out and putting new ones in.
Given that "the space" is 1830mm and the boards I've looked at are either 1800 or 2400, I accept there will be a lot of waste as I will need16 (95mm boards) for this panel (and any others I do). But, who can't use more garden planters!!!
All ideas welcome, thanks in advance!
Take care
Mike