Depends on what foam you're talking about. Some are ICC rated. Approved for building construction. Pole barns. Power poles. Pilings. Those foams are top notch. No doubt about it. But they are very expensive compared to concrete mix. I'm talking 3 or 4 times more expensive.
Interesting video. I’m finishing a fence this week and used Fast 2K post foam for the first time. I was able to let the post go in 1.5 minutes and it can hold a load in 3. Must be mixed reviews based on your he chemicals used in the foam products. Thanks for sharing.
Why don't you guys just use a screw piles for foundation these wooden piles to STAY in the soil forever!😊 Screws drilled to the ground less than ten minutes each then just add the wooden parts on those. Voila the fence is there for decades to stay!😊
90% of fences will never seen that type of abuse. That stress which you put on it is just ridiculous and i only see that being an isue for a farmer like you that has a half ton animal to worry about. The rest of us with residential homes, swimming pools, and bar b q grills really dont need the extra strength and honestly I would not judge the Silka foam type post material by the way you installed it if you wanted it to be its strongest. I suggest throwing some wooden blocks about 2.5 inches cubed ainto the hole with the foam and maybe even a few scraps of rock the size of softballs so they get stuck in the middle of the hole if you really want it more sturdy. Usually I only use foam for residential installs of short fencing and repair work. Using it for large post holes for a farm is just ridiculous and like using a garden shovel to go dig up a city water main and a 4 foot diameter pipe and then complaining that it doeant do the job as well. Get the right tool for the job and when you have a storm and you are cleaning up your home and the 6 foot privacy fence vlew down with 3 posts coming out of the ground you will be thankful Silla is there and you can repair the fence quickly with 3 bags from a local hardware store because home Depot is an hour away and you have 5 other things yo do like cut fallen trees into pieces and put them at the curb, blow off all the muck that flooding brought and high qinda xaused to fall, and repair a few pieces of siding or trim or even a broken window. Silka is good for residential decks, residential fences, residential mailboxes, and residential light posts. That is a light post that is 5 feet tall or 6 at the highest. Not 14 feet tall or 20 feet tall. You get it? . Silka is good for a garden trellis that is 6 feet tall. Not a city picnic shelter at your local park that spans 40 feet and has 8 inch diameter metal posts. Silka is even up to code for a residential wooden privacy fence at 6 feet tall and will last longer than the cross supports will on a 6 foot fencing panel when they are ruined by rain erosion. It takes about 20-30 years for a properly built fence in a high rain area to rot out its cross supports. Silka will stay its ground in hurricane winds and if a fence is going to blow down with silka then a concrete post is only going to make it break or it will just do the same and fall over. Silka is even good for stairs and handrails and pergolas but you have to choose your battles and if it is a handrail that is skinny metal, like 2 inch diameter, then use concrete because the thin metal will rip through the foam and come loose without a bunch of pieces of hard material in the post to prevent it from moving. Expanding foam works as a mass and has some give. It isnt as strong as concrete but passes code and in 90% of places in the United States at least it is plenty and males life easier and will outlast the rest of the fence and wont vlow over even in high winds. No 120mph winds though. Those are enough to break any fence out the ground. Not just foam.
Foam sucks. Concrete is the tried and true method. Foam leaves no counterweight like concrete does and doesn’t harden as firm either. Foam is just another way to make your job easier and create job security by making a product that doesn’t hold up over time and under stress and ends up having to be redone sooner than expected. It’s just so someone could make things cheaper.
There is a foam that is rated for building construction. Pole barns. Pilings. Power poles. Independently tested. Approved by ICC. America and Canada. I forget the name. So it depends on what foam you're talking about. And it is expensive. HB Fuller Post Anchor - that's it. Power companies swear by it.
Hmmm....I didn't have the same experience using foam to set a temporary fence. That fence was in place for about a year and even after sledging on it and using a farm jack and a choke, those 4x4 posts (7 of them) would not pull out. Ended up sawing them off at grade. Now watching this video, I'd say your level of vigor while attempting to remove was much higher on the foam post.....seriously, you hardly tried to push on the cement post. Great video if you are trying to justify additional labor costs........great entertainment though!!
I'm not finding post crete available in the US. Is it?
The shadows and clouds never moved lol
Depends on what foam you're talking about. Some are ICC rated. Approved for building construction. Pole barns. Power poles. Pilings. Those foams are top notch. No doubt about it. But they are very expensive compared to concrete mix. I'm talking 3 or 4 times more expensive.
Thanks for your tip 👍🏻 Not all products are a total gimmick, all the time. 👍🏻
Good info.....LOWER THE MUSIC VOLUME so we can hear you!!!
You needed to use a bit more post foam, it wasn't even to ground level
Interesting video. I’m finishing a fence this week and used Fast 2K post foam for the first time. I was able to let the post go in 1.5 minutes and it can hold a load in 3. Must be mixed reviews based on your he chemicals used in the foam products. Thanks for sharing.
Concrete. End of discussion.
Power companies use foam for poles .....but "concrete" 😂
why you pour the dry cement? why dont you mix cement and pebbles with water and after mixing trow fill the holes?
It's postcrete not concrete, that's whole point of it, it doesn't need mixing. The lads didn't even need to mix it as much as they did.
I can’t understand him. What is he saying about foam?
Why don't you guys just use a screw piles for foundation these wooden piles to STAY in the soil forever!😊 Screws drilled to the ground less than ten minutes each then just add the wooden parts on those. Voila the fence is there for decades to stay!😊
Meh, it depends on the chemical make up of that post.
90% of fences will never seen that type of abuse. That stress which you put on it is just ridiculous and i only see that being an isue for a farmer like you that has a half ton animal to worry about. The rest of us with residential homes, swimming pools, and bar b q grills really dont need the extra strength and honestly I would not judge the Silka foam type post material by the way you installed it if you wanted it to be its strongest. I suggest throwing some wooden blocks about 2.5 inches cubed ainto the hole with the foam and maybe even a few scraps of rock the size of softballs so they get stuck in the middle of the hole if you really want it more sturdy. Usually I only use foam for residential installs of short fencing and repair work. Using it for large post holes for a farm is just ridiculous and like using a garden shovel to go dig up a city water main and a 4 foot diameter pipe and then complaining that it doeant do the job as well.
Get the right tool for the job and when you have a storm and you are cleaning up your home and the 6 foot privacy fence vlew down with 3 posts coming out of the ground you will be thankful Silla is there and you can repair the fence quickly with 3 bags from a local hardware store because home Depot is an hour away and you have 5 other things yo do like cut fallen trees into pieces and put them at the curb, blow off all the muck that flooding brought and high qinda xaused to fall, and repair a few pieces of siding or trim or even a broken window.
Silka is good for residential decks, residential fences, residential mailboxes, and residential light posts. That is a light post that is 5 feet tall or 6 at the highest. Not 14 feet tall or 20 feet tall. You get it?
.
Silka is good for a garden trellis that is 6 feet tall. Not a city picnic shelter at your local park that spans 40 feet and has 8 inch diameter metal posts.
Silka is even up to code for a residential wooden privacy fence at 6 feet tall and will last longer than the cross supports will on a 6 foot fencing panel when they are ruined by rain erosion. It takes about 20-30 years for a properly built fence in a high rain area to rot out its cross supports. Silka will stay its ground in hurricane winds and if a fence is going to blow down with silka then a concrete post is only going to make it break or it will just do the same and fall over.
Silka is even good for stairs and handrails and pergolas but you have to choose your battles and if it is a handrail that is skinny metal, like 2 inch diameter, then use concrete because the thin metal will rip through the foam and come loose without a bunch of pieces of hard material in the post to prevent it from moving. Expanding foam works as a mass and has some give. It isnt as strong as concrete but passes code and in 90% of places in the United States at least it is plenty and males life easier and will outlast the rest of the fence and wont vlow over even in high winds. No 120mph winds though. Those are enough to break any fence out the ground. Not just foam.
A category 4-5 hurricane take these fences so easy. We have no chance to use anything like concrete. That foam is a joke...
You used two bags of concrete. Why not 2 bags of foam? Not a fair review
Foam sucks. Concrete is the tried and true method. Foam leaves no counterweight like concrete does and doesn’t harden as firm either. Foam is just another way to make your job easier and create job security by making a product that doesn’t hold up over time and under stress and ends up having to be redone sooner than expected. It’s just so someone could make things cheaper.
There is a foam that is rated for building construction. Pole barns. Pilings. Power poles. Independently tested. Approved by ICC. America and Canada. I forget the name. So it depends on what foam you're talking about. And it is expensive. HB Fuller Post Anchor - that's it. Power companies swear by it.
I can’t stand these videos were there is music over the guy speaking. Why? Nothing creative or entertaining about that. Annoying.
Hmmm....I didn't have the same experience using foam to set a temporary fence. That fence was in place for about a year and even after sledging on it and using a farm jack and a choke, those 4x4 posts (7 of them) would not pull out. Ended up sawing them off at grade.
Now watching this video, I'd say your level of vigor while attempting to remove was much higher on the foam post.....seriously, you hardly tried to push on the cement post. Great video if you are trying to justify additional labor costs........great entertainment though!!
Foam no good dah!!