Is that really your daily uniform? Never seen a setup like that other than prison uniforms. I do handyman service for a living. I run a blue shirt with blue jeans. Blue vs orange. Just another choice.
I used a post driver to get to the 3 ft. You can buy them for about 30 bucks. I would recommend doing it for sure. Hiting them with a hammer will bend the tops and you will not be able to get the caps on the top. At the homeowners preference I only concreted the big posts that connected new runs of the chain link. LOL my orange get up was that it was raining that day and through most of the installation. I believe this is actually a common practice. For the most durable and longest lasting I would suggest concreting every post. It can also depend on the strength of the ground, soil versus clay etc for strength. Those were rain pants and just happen to have an orange shirt to kind of match.
Absolutely. Praise and Glory to God. My provider and the only one I trust no questions asked.
Is that really your daily uniform? Never seen a setup like that other than prison uniforms. I do handyman service for a living. I run a blue shirt with blue jeans. Blue vs orange. Just another choice.
Good job
I just installed some 6 ft chain link for a dog run. Very fiddly, took forever. Charge by the hour. Every other fence, by the foot.
I can definitely agree with that, charge by the hour for chain link and by the foot with other types of fence
So how did you set your posts? Drive them in? If so how did you drive them down 3' Or did you concrete them in?
I used a post driver to get to the 3 ft. You can buy them for about 30 bucks. I would recommend doing it for sure. Hiting them with a hammer will bend the tops and you will not be able to get the caps on the top. At the homeowners preference I only concreted the big posts that connected new runs of the chain link. LOL my orange get up was that it was raining that day and through most of the installation. I believe this is actually a common practice. For the most durable and longest lasting I would suggest concreting every post. It can also depend on the strength of the ground, soil versus clay etc for strength. Those were rain pants and just happen to have an orange shirt to kind of match.
ever hear of a "come-along"?