Secure wooden fence panel to concrete post
Posted: Tue May 04, 2021 1:23 pm
Hi guys
I'm really hoping someone will be able to offer me a solution to a problem I've had a for a few months and it's driving me insane!
A few months ago, during some high winds, my back fence panel came apart from the adjoining concrete post. Upon closer inspection, the concrete post wasn't a tri post (with three grooves) but had instead been glued(?!) with a thin panel inbetween to the post.
I've been staking the panel both sides with some scrap lengths of timber and concrete posts but these keep slipping and anytime there's a gale, inevitably the stakes come loose and the panel bends at the middle post.
Can anyone offer any suggestions as to how to fix this without replacing the entire length of panel as ideally we'd like to eventually get rid of this and have a summer house created. So we need a cheap and easy fix to keep the panel from caving in entirely!
If people need more info or pics, let me know! (apologies for one photo being the wrong way round - wasn't sure how to rotate!)
Many thanks
I'm really hoping someone will be able to offer me a solution to a problem I've had a for a few months and it's driving me insane!
A few months ago, during some high winds, my back fence panel came apart from the adjoining concrete post. Upon closer inspection, the concrete post wasn't a tri post (with three grooves) but had instead been glued(?!) with a thin panel inbetween to the post.
I've been staking the panel both sides with some scrap lengths of timber and concrete posts but these keep slipping and anytime there's a gale, inevitably the stakes come loose and the panel bends at the middle post.
Can anyone offer any suggestions as to how to fix this without replacing the entire length of panel as ideally we'd like to eventually get rid of this and have a summer house created. So we need a cheap and easy fix to keep the panel from caving in entirely!
If people need more info or pics, let me know! (apologies for one photo being the wrong way round - wasn't sure how to rotate!)
Many thanks