This final part shows us the completed 6' fence section of the 8' fence.
*Screws can be put in from the front of the fence or from the back. You get better attachment putting them in from the front, especially if your going to fill the holes with PL and paint over it.
These two fence sides took me about a year to complete by myself. It's about 400' feet, so it is slow going with such a huge project and since there is paint it's weather limiting.
If you meet the setbacks in your county, you can actually (in most places in the US) build a solid 8' fence, but who would want to give up 15' or more of property to meet the setbacks. Check with your local county code office before setting your poles so you know what the set backs are and what the fence height restrictions are. That way you don't build something and have to take it down. In the city, codes are way more strict than in the country so make sure you get any and all approval for the county and submit drawings if necessary. You don't want to have to redo anything because it wasn't to code.
What I didn't show you was many weeks of painting. In fact painting was as time consuming as building the fence simply because you need so many counts to build up the look. I'd say I bought about twenty to twenty five, 4-gallon restore buckets. I did a mixture of rolling and brushing with the 10x restore paint as well as spraying through an airless sprayer the 4x material (which I thinned down to about 1-2x) So before you commit to painting know that it's expensive and time consuming, even though it does add decades to the longevity of your fence. Painting offers many times the protection that stain does and stain has to be continually re-applied. Paint rarely has to be re-applied and if it does it can be sprayed.
Thank you all for watching my 3 part series.
*Screws can be put in from the front of the fence or from the back. You get better attachment putting them in from the front, especially if your going to fill the holes with PL and paint over it.
These two fence sides took me about a year to complete by myself. It's about 400' feet, so it is slow going with such a huge project and since there is paint it's weather limiting.
If you meet the setbacks in your county, you can actually (in most places in the US) build a solid 8' fence, but who would want to give up 15' or more of property to meet the setbacks. Check with your local county code office before setting your poles so you know what the set backs are and what the fence height restrictions are. That way you don't build something and have to take it down. In the city, codes are way more strict than in the country so make sure you get any and all approval for the county and submit drawings if necessary. You don't want to have to redo anything because it wasn't to code.
What I didn't show you was many weeks of painting. In fact painting was as time consuming as building the fence simply because you need so many counts to build up the look. I'd say I bought about twenty to twenty five, 4-gallon restore buckets. I did a mixture of rolling and brushing with the 10x restore paint as well as spraying through an airless sprayer the 4x material (which I thinned down to about 1-2x) So before you commit to painting know that it's expensive and time consuming, even though it does add decades to the longevity of your fence. Painting offers many times the protection that stain does and stain has to be continually re-applied. Paint rarely has to be re-applied and if it does it can be sprayed.
Thank you all for watching my 3 part series.
cedar How To Build An 8' Foot Privacy Fence - Part 3 | |
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