Non-Mark (Dan) is the best at explaining processes clearly. And clearly, he is king of the concrete vibrator. (I am exercising heroic restraint in not going on about that.) Truly, fence building requires knowledge of a number of skills. My deceased father, industrial and residential electrician, always said he had to know more about carpentry than electricity. I'm still flummoxed by the 30" frost line where you are in Wyoming. I'm at 48" in central - not even northern - New England. That depth makes some projects here too costly to endeavor, though it may sometimes also involve cheating, but that never ends well. Very fine job, presentation and production as always.
BTW, the vinyl fence I installed in Pinellas county survived Milton perfectly. Since I used the no-dig 'iSuck' system when installing the (cough, cough) 16 gauge poles 4' down and the top rail joiners, the fence merely laughed at the hurricane. Someday I hope to post a video of my patented 'iSuck' post setting method. I learned so much from your channel. You're my best sub.
Actually, it's why I am successful in fencing because I brought a ton of construction experience that accelerated my come up. In commercial, industrial, and civil projects, it is no longer just a fence. It is general construction. Helical piles, concrete form work/placing/finishing, rebar, welding, operating equipment, grading. The list goes on. The more you know, the more successful you'll be.
Nice Job SWI Team Thanks again
Most guys sub that part out. Great job guys. You guys are awesome
Non-Mark (Dan) is the best at explaining processes clearly. And clearly, he is king of the concrete vibrator. (I am exercising heroic restraint in not going on about that.) Truly, fence building requires knowledge of a number of skills. My deceased father, industrial and residential electrician, always said he had to know more about carpentry than electricity.
I'm still flummoxed by the 30" frost line where you are in Wyoming. I'm at 48" in central - not even northern - New England. That depth makes some projects here too costly to endeavor, though it may sometimes also involve cheating, but that never ends well. Very fine job, presentation and production as always.
I woke up my parrot laughing at your 'jumping jacks' 🤣
Great video!
Thanks!
How do you open a gate like that in an emergency with no power?
Groovey😂😂😂
BTW, the vinyl fence I installed in Pinellas county survived Milton perfectly.
Since I used the no-dig 'iSuck' system when installing the (cough, cough) 16 gauge poles 4' down and the top rail joiners, the fence merely laughed at the hurricane.
Someday I hope to post a video of my patented 'iSuck' post setting method.
I learned so much from your channel. You're my best sub.
Love it! Would love to see a video whenever that happens. 👍🏻
Nicely did.
Aw shucks!
Y’all should’ve tied into the pre existing concrete to keep that rebar nice and in place
Fence guys gotta be experts on fifty different things 😭
It's so true.
Actually, it's why I am successful in fencing because I brought a ton of construction experience that accelerated my come up. In commercial, industrial, and civil projects, it is no longer just a fence. It is general construction. Helical piles, concrete form work/placing/finishing, rebar, welding, operating equipment, grading. The list goes on. The more you know, the more successful you'll be.