Knock fence posts straight?

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raine
Posts: 7
Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2012 6:11 am
Location: Surrey, UK

Post: # 77642Post raine

Hi,

My left boundary is made up of concrete posts with drop-in fence panels.

Several of the panels need replacing, but most of the posts are leaning one way or another, so I think we'll struggle to get the new panels in.

Can concrete posts usually be knocked back level with a sledgehammer, or is it best to replace the posts along with the panels?

Thanks guys.

msh paving
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Post: # 77643Post msh paving

raine wrote:Can concrete posts usually be knocked back level with a sledgehammer, or is it best to replace the posts along with the panels?

Thanks guys.
Not a chance, they will crack in half, concrete posts are hard but brittle/fragile if you hit or lever them over you stand a 90% chance off them snapping MSH :)
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Mikey_C
Posts: 952
Joined: Mon Oct 30, 2006 8:24 pm
Location: Bournemouth, Dorset

Post: # 77644Post Mikey_C

you might be able dig out round them level them up and concrete them back in. But probably only worth it if they are nearly new, when you dig one out you might find the reason why they have not stayed level.

rimexboy
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Joined: Thu Aug 07, 2008 8:31 pm

Post: # 77646Post rimexboy

time and cost wise best to probly replace them... IMO

Pablo
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Location: N/Ireland

Post: # 77648Post Pablo

Yes I'd personally replace them and if it's a shared boundary then your neighbour should pay half the costs. Good fences make good neighbours and the chances are they've not been deep enough or not had enough concrete around them to make them lean badly like that.
Can't see it from my house

local patios and driveway
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Post: # 77651Post local patios and driveway

Like pablo said, got to be replaced. Probably a bad diy job or even worse a cheapo tradesman

Kuts
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Post: # 77652Post Kuts

Mikey_C wrote:you might be able dig out round them level them up and concrete them back in. But probably only worth it if they are nearly new, when you dig one out you might find the reason why they have not stayed level.
+1 for this.
I had a few in my front garden go, whoever put them in only put a few shovels of concrete in so I dug round plenty then topped up with a strong mix.

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 77669Post lutonlagerlout

^^ 99%
need to be removed cleaned up and done properly
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raine
Posts: 7
Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2012 6:11 am
Location: Surrey, UK

Post: # 77674Post raine

Brilliant, thanks for the unanimous responses. :-)

So, the next question is - how deep should fence posts usually be concreted in?

msh paving
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Post: # 77675Post msh paving

6ft fence, 8ft post, 2ft concrete, simples MSH :)
paving, mini-crusher, mini-digger hire and groundwork
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