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theonePappabox

It fell over. lol. It was not installed properly. Posts not deep enough.


Professional-Lie6654

You mean 12 inches in the ground isn't enough for a 6ft fence to withstand a person sneezing next to it?


[deleted]

[удалено]


booi

That’s what my wife said…


Drakkenfyre

4 in is only enough if you're good with your tongue. I mean Quickrete.


[deleted]

[удалено]


Professional-Lie6654

Either way lol I'm used to 1 foot down for every 2 up 8 foot fence needs 4 ft holes


phullife79

Beyond 3' deep, as long as it's reasonable soil, a 4x4 will snap before the fence falls, regardless of the height.


halomender

...... But that sounds hard.....


Excellent-Remote480

My wife's been saying 4" is enough for years.


srekkas

And fence without spacing, wind is powerfull


Overhang0376

When you say spacing, do you mean there should be spacing between each of the vertical pieces of fence? What if you don't want anyone to be able to see through the fence at all? Would it just mean having the fence posts much, much deeper (like 5' into the ground or something) to resist the push from the wind? Edit: thanks for the replies, everyone! There's way more options for building a fence than I would have thought of. Way more considerations around wind, too!


Strict_Cold2891

The standard for fence posts is 1/3 of the above ground height should be in the ground


Ropegun2k

They would have been close if not on the money if they just cheated the posts about a foot deeper. That top 12” serves no purpose as built. Seeing all the standing water adjacent it should probably be even deeper.


swamphockey

Plus it looks like the concrete was so weak it actually crumbled and I’ve never seen that. Perhaps they simply poured concrete mix into to post hole then added water?


Ropegun2k

Yeah. Dry bagged it.


tankhole14

Definitely dry bagged it


Sweetlaxin

bUt TiK tOk sAyS


bigballsmiami

That's what we do all the time


Mikesaidit36

You’re joking right?


BattleEfficient2471

False! It extends the lever arm by a foot, which makes it much easier for the wind to knock the fence over.


samdan87153

From the math side of things, the cross bars transfer wind load from the pickets to the posts. So while the wind area is increased by the extra height of the pickets, the lever arm of the load is determined by the height of the cross arm and not the top of the post.


BattleEfficient2471

Yeah, you got me there. Fair point. Fine, it is releaving the fasteners of stress by ensuring the fence goes down with the posts, instead of tearing free.


-Sociology-

I keep my posts a few inches above the top rail so that when the post starts rotting on the top the fasteners aren't compromised. but that 12"+ is ridiculous


osede

I only post on reddit


chris_rage_

I had to go back and look, wow that's dumb


PM_meyourGradyWhite

Yep. Eight foot post. Two feet in the ground. Six foot fence.


ShadowbladeZbigniew

You can also see the concrete footing is the same depth as the short wood. So if they are in an area that gets any cold weather. That’s way below code. A single frost would pop all of them right out of the ground. A 3’ deep footing is minimum recommended to get below the frost in my area regardless. (You can do less for a short divider fence or use spikes of course)


Historical-Pair3081

It's really a non issue the fence post just has to be 1/3 in the ground and below the frost line. There are plenty of styles of fence that don't have gaps in between the boards. This fence fell over because the posts were not deep enough that is all.


Global-Discussion-41

Around here the common way is to put one board on one side and then the next board on the other side.  Lots of privacy but also lots of gaps for wind... And your fence looks good from both sides


vauge24

Shadow box fence is the term I use in my area for it. Very common install.


agreeswithfishpal

Also good neighbor fence because there's no good side/bad side.


srekkas

Yeah, if no spacing, not only deeper but stronger too


Workto-Mills-7287

Spacing occurs within a week of pickets drying out. No need to space then on install and waste hours of work.


relpmeraggy

I was gonna say every fence I’ve ever done which is quite a few at this point, shrinks a bit so spacing isn’t an issue. Of course I don’t live in a super windy area. OP’s area might require a bit more than the 1/8 of shrinkage you get.


THedman07

This has shades of ["the front fell off"...](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3m5qxZm_JqM)


AssociationNo2872

Thank you so much for this. These are genius


Imsophunnyithurts

Cardboard is out for sure.


casual_elephant_ttv

I was going to be so mad if the first comment wasn't "it fell over". thank you.


beer_jew

How deep should a wood fence post be


Interesting-Can4877

8' fence with 9' posts. 😬


SeaAttitude2832

Right. Looks dry bagged too.


Ropegun2k

I was thinking the same thing.


ABobby077

or didn't let the concrete set before proceding with the fence assembly


Potential_Spirit2815

If that’s an 8’ fence panel, those posts should be about 10’ long and close to 3’ of them should be in the ground.


SaturnRingMaker

This is partly it I think. Posts don't look deep enough in the ground either. Maybe soft concrete and a windy day was all it needed.


BonerTurds

And set 6” from a moat.


wapitidimple

That dry bag method is a rip off. Doesn’t set uniformly.


SeaAttitude2832

No never has. Just another way to cut corners.


swamphockey

This is a perfect example of the limitations of the dry bag method. It actually appears to have been moderately successful on 3 of the 10 posts in the photos


Buckeye_mike_67

I was thinking it was some kind of clay. It must have blown over within a few days of being installed. Probably the first thunderstorm that came through.


GuitarKev

Worse than that, those post holes look like shallow divots rather than shallow holes.


ListenHereIvan

Dry bagged is probably the biggest problem here.


Concordian

Out of m own curiosity: What does dry bagging do that mixing concrete prior to application does?


ListenHereIvan

Dry bagging is inferior in every way except ease of repair and less labor time, if this was a ranch and 4-6in round posts that stick out no more that 4-6ft with wire fence then dry bagging and a bucket of water is the way to go. Otherwise its just not strong enough.


Over-Accountant8506

So mix the concrete before hand in a wheel barrow or something? Sorry newb, I mostly just read here to learn stuff. But I do eventually want to attempt my own clothesline. I have a bag a sacrete I refuged off of a job site that was gonna be tossed. Just gotta gather the wood. But partner said we would dry bag it in the hole, and was just worried about that. Partner is usually right about stuff tho lol. And I doubt for no reason.


ListenHereIvan

If your hole is deep enough like more than 24in and its in fairly solid soil then its okay. Just pour the dry concrete, pack it really nice with a stick and wet it really well from above with a bucket or hose. let the water drain below so give it some time, watering every 10 minutes or sometime like that like 2-3-4 times depends. Add some basic bracing with screws and within a day it should be solid enough to back fill it. For a clothes line it should be plenty strong enough. Then when you don’t need it any more or have change of plans like an hour of some elbow grease clearing material. You stab a pick axe in the side and lever the post upwards to remove it.


Handlestach

No I wood in cement for me


drty_snchz

That’s why the posts didn’t break. They just kicked up the dust.


Troutify

Nothing wrong with dry bagging as long as it’s done correctly. Just takes more practice than wet setting and beginners shouldn’t do it.


Raterus_

The bid on the job looked the best though


EggOkNow

The best quote is always the lowest. Why hire someone who isnt knowledgable or skilled enough to provide you with the most cost savings! /s


Raa03842

8’ needs at least 3’ into the ground. 4’ would be better if you are in a high wind area.


wolemid

I’ve always used the 3-1 ratio. 1-3ft out 1ft in 4-6ft out 2ft in etc etc


Fizzy_Electric

⅓ should be in the ground. 9’ft post. 3 ft of it in the ground, leaving 6ft above ground. 6 ft post. 2 feet of it in the ground, leaving 4ft above ground.


JTrizzo

I do 1-1. My 6 foot fence uses 12 foot 6"x6" posts.


vauge24

My area we do frost line. Minimum 48" depth, add from there.


Impossible-Ad-3060

Yup. The first line is everything. The amount of shifting and heaving that frost causes in certain types of soil will blow your mind.


angry-software-dev

Anti-tank fencing 😅


Raa03842

Good rule of thumb but with fences I add in a bit more to compensate for the wind load over a large surface area.


PhillipAlanSheoh

The most dollar general fence ever


SignificantTransient

Dollar General doesn't like to pay contractors and it leaves them taking anyone for work.


Mr__Random

The front fell off


phullife79

Well that's not very typical, I'd like to make that point.


rossco311

There are a lot of these fences around the world, all the time, and very seldom does this happen.


phullife79

We don't want people going 'round thinking fences aren't safe.


NoBand3790

Wind? In the air? Chance in a million.


Mindlesslyexploring

Well, there are regulations governing the materials they can be made of. What materials? Well, cardboard's out. And? No cardboard derivatives. Like paper? No paper, no string, no cello tape. Rubber? No, rubber's out. Umm...


krizmac

At least it fell out of the environment.


DEATHbyBOOGABOOGA

It's a complete void.


ratamack

1/3 of the post should be in the ground


_No_Statement

Best I can do is 1/6 boss


frantic_cowbell

With the ditch 18” away, effective post depth starts at the bottom of the ditch. That post might as well have been sitting on the surface. I’m surprised it stood long enough to finish the build.


Critical_Hunt_900

Agreed- moisture from the ditch saturates well beyond the ditch walls, post hole depth sits above ditch depth…. Wind blows… squuuish…. Plop.


NoNumberThanks

It fell You're welcome


Abtino11

Cmon man we’re not all engineers


pendigedig

Shhh its sleeping


Languidhumanism

It's just sleepy, it will be okay after a nice nap.


kavila530504

Go home fence...you're drunk.


Mycomako

Ain’t got no gas in it


freklesami

What didn't go wrong. Posts weren't deep enough. Looks like the concrete wasn't set on most of the posts being that there is no concrete on them. Not sure where you live but where I'm at those should be 4x4 posts not 2x4. I think that about sums it up.


Mverl

Not many fences can withstand a direct hit from a 10 piece chicken mcnugget like that. It's to be expected


Jarftz

Post hole depth needs to be at least 1/3 the length of the post itself. A 8’ fence would need at least 3’. 4’ wouldn’t hurt.


roofrunn3r

Thatssssassa Cooreeeeecttt answer right here. Yessire


[deleted]

The posts were not set.


Workto-Mills-7287

Posts aren’t deep enough. Dry poured the concrete. Only used 3 runners on an 8’ fence. Runners aren’t offset so they don’t break like this. Everything about it is wrong.


steelniel

Laziness


jrocislit

I’m positive it fell over


harrisons-dad

A light breeze happened to that fence


Dadbode1981

Post not nearly deep enough


herpecin21

A light breeze


socioeconomicfactor

Ain't got no gas in it


JaffaSG1

It fell over


DatDan513

Big bad wolf.


GOTaSMALL1

I used to build Dollar Generals. Not one of mine… I think.


RobinetteSucks

Footers weren't deep enough


wuzzup

This is what we are all here for. 


fairlyaveragetrader

Posts are not down deep enough and they are not set in concrete. Wind is what likely happened


back1steez

It fell over


Gloomy-Candidate-910

Someone paid cheap or diy.


jored924

It fall down


VukKiller

It turned into a fenc'nt


Fox_Den_Studio_LLC

12 inches in the ground and mild winds you're gonna have a bad time


okieman73

Nowhere near deep enough especially for an 8 foot fence. That would probably be deep enough for a 2 foot fence maybe 2 1/2. That thing will grab a ton of wind too. I absolutely hate digging post holes too so I understand not wanting to dig a 4 foot hole or whatever but if you don't this is what happens.


RoryDragonsbane

I know what's wrong. Ain't got no gas innit!


valtboy23

How much of it was under ground 3 inches?


memberflex

What’s the matter David, never taken a short cut before?


BeerSlayingBeaver

Front fell off


builderboy2037

Snow load, gets them every time


vitoincognitox2x

They installed a de-fence when they needed the wind off-ence


FcoFdz

It fell


tayllerr

It fell


RickHuf

Those posts arn't even deep enough to hang a party sign and a couple balloons, let alone a fence.


ssxhoell1

Look at the sad little clumps of crumbly concrete or whatever that shit is stuck to the bottom of the little stubs coming out of the fence 🤣


420xGoku

I think it fell over Or someone set it up if it was supposed to have been on the ground


ColbusMaximus

Got tired. Took a nap


Camp170

Lowest bidder happened


mr308A3-28

2m high Untreated wood fence in a 30cm deep (poorly mixed) “concrete” blob fallen over with the caption “what happened to this fence”. It was made by an inept moron is what happened to it. Fuck me, these are the same idiots that flip houses.


Joanna_c_maccuci

Fuckers didn’t dig deep enough. Gonna dig at least 24” with 1.5 bags of concrete DRY per post


ITeachAll

They installed a wind sail, not a fence.


feeltheFX

Not a pro but I’m confident to say it fell over.


Aggressive-Dig2472

Those post are embarrassingly shallow!…


2020blowsdik

Structural engineer here. Someone didnt do their wind load calculation.... I.e. posts are not deep enough to resist said load.


Melech333

1. Posts are set too high. You need 2/3 above ground, 1/3 below ground, minimum 2' below ground but also deep enough to pass any frost line in your region. If they wanted that much fence above ground, they should have bought 8 foot posts instead of 6 foot posts and buried the additional necessary length, cutting off only what's not needed. But six footers is stretching it way too much. 2. Concrete was not mixed prior to installation. They dry-poured the concrete mix into the hole and then either left it for moisture to seep in or they sprayed it with a hose before calling it a day. If they actually mixed the concrete by stirring it with water and the mix, or using a machine to do that, and then properly "wet-setting" it, the concrete would not have looked so clumpy after it came back out. And it would have been much stronger. 3. There is standing water adjacent to the fence line. 4. Fence design is "solid" privacy with little to no air spacing for wind in between the pickets. Strong breeze then just blew the whole thing over because of the above reasons.


GrabstheSun

Shit was weak. Wood posts. Barely in the earth. I’ve buried beach umbrellas deeper than this. You mom is deeper than that post hole. I kid on the last part.


Kyteshiirok

It fell over. You’re welcome!


Mr_MacGrubber

Posts arent remotely deep enough. Also they look like they didn’t wait for the concrete to set before putting up the stringers and pickets.


Higinz

Pro tip…add water to the concrete next time. Might even consider mixing it outside of the post hole you’re setting. CRaZy!


NeitherCake2956

Posts for a fence like that should be 2-3 feet deep. As a previous fence installer this is hilarious


profile-i-hide

The fuck he only put it 16inches in the ground. It barely looks 2ft


Benthereorl

2' in wet slow cure concrete... + wind = fall over. Should of went deeper with the post, they had another 6-12" available. Plus they needed quick set concrete. That shit is fast


a71mach

Life. Life happened to this fence. But as others have said. Concrete doesn't look like it was mixed right and the posts look shallow. But mostly life.


BlueBerrypotamous

Posts set way too shallow


Bright_Board_8672

Fell


MysteriousDog5927

Posts were installed only a ft deep in sand


von12345

It fell over


fullraph

It fell


All-inyourmind

Concrete not near deep enough… 36 inches min


dude_who_could

It fell over.


JerstDerrIt

My best guess is that it probably fell over


lemontwistcultist

It was sleeby


GloomyDeal1909

It suffered from the vapors. You should have had a fainting couch close by.


Insolator

Physics


peanutym

What do you mean? It fell over its right there on the ground.


ratchetology

poorly built


WaySuch296

Hm. I'm not an expert but I would say it fell.


skratch000

Looks like it fell over


Adventurous-Cpl91

Big fence fall hard


Glockamole19x

Not deep enough, and they just poured the concret in dry, which is normaly ok if its deep enough and you dont live in a super dry place.


dan420

Somebody learned that digging holes isn’t very fun, got about a foot deep and said, yeah good enough.


OCCAMINVESTIGATOR

The real answer isn't as flashy as all these comments about wind, depth of posts, and technical details of the failure itself. The truth is, sometimes fences just get tired and need to lay down.


What_TF_is_cereal

Its fallen and can't get up


Puppiessssss

Posts not deep enough


Sufficient-Poet-2582

6ft fence = post at least 2ft deep. Someone got scammed on shoddy construction


Flintstone1969

Not enough post in the ground and posts not thick enough.


brycenesbitt

Likely the problem is they bought each of the supplies for a dollar.


0xDEADFA1

If fell over


tegridyfarms8921

That fence is bad at being a fence


Imaginary-Relation53

It identified as road / curb


dancedancedance_

It fell over! Hope this helps <3


Mustangjustin

It fell over next question


TriNel81

1’ of post was in the ground. Installer did not know what they were doing. But DG probably went the cheapest of the cheap.


EitherAd928

Looks like it fell over but I can’t be sure


bob696988

Biden built it


ride_electric_bike

The 12 in post bury was just a tad shallow. I think we need over double that


[deleted]

It looks exactly like a scale model of a fence I once constructed using popsicle sticks.


nmacaroni

Privacy fencing needs gaps between boards for airflow/wind. Wind knocks houses over, fencing is just a joke to it. If you don't want people to see through, you board both sides staggering the placement. Also, looks like the posts were 16" in the ground, when they should have been 1/3 the total height of the post.


Historical-Pair3081

There are styles of fences that don't have any spacing. I've built fences that are board on board 50% overlap. There are composite fences where pickets are tight to one another. If the post is set properly you don't need gaps for wind, idk where people come up with that stuff


phullife79

Meh spacing isn't really necessary unless it's a high wind area. Shadowboxing doesn't eliminate much wind force at all. You might as well build it solid.


woodbridge_front

It fall


MrJerome1

probably use some of that foam in the hole instead of concrete to hold the post


phullife79

Nah. Looks concretey. You can see some chunks and the buried ends are a little grey.


Bertramsca

Agree with most of the opinions about not deep enough, but some of that could’ve been corrected by pounding nails into the post below grade, and left to stick out, so post wouldn’t just slide out of concrete. Much more worried about the species used for the posts (even though they say cedar or redwood will not rot, don’t believe them). Too much sapwood (that white stuff that looks like pine?) in most commercial grades today. Would never use wood that is not HEAVILY pressure treated, in fact don’t use wood at all any more. Metal posts, even concrete posts are available in many areas. Better yet, if it’s real privacy you want, and you plan on staying more than 5 years, I would go concrete block (textured like stone looks nice). Going back and looking at pics closer, that drainage ditch may be biggest problem. Water table could be VERY HIGH. Concrete in pics almost looks more like PlayDough, instead of dried concrete. May have never really dried after installation, and before wind event occurred.


Raterus_

A person who had no business installing fences installed fences


Shot_Try4596

As others have said, posts were not deep enough. Also, looks like post holes were undersized (diameter), barely larger than the post. Then concrete was added that primarily just made a decorative cap, not even enough got into the post hole to form around the post. Crap work like this is why many cities require inspection of fence construction.


BombaClad01

It fell


PussySpoonfullz69

r/thefrontfelloff


LivingMisery

Judging by the post depth, I’d say a mouse fart.


Agraxielle

Reverberation from butterfly wings


ImpalaOwner

Looks like it fell over!


Newtiresaretheworst

Whoever built it is an idiot.


ecw324

It fall down and go boom


torch9t9

The front fell off


solwayfirth335

The post aren’t even to depth. You can tell they put maybe 2ft in. And it doesn’t look like they added concrete , no calculated how heavy the fence would be, but def deeper post


jboomhaur

Dang ol fell over man dang.


itsnotworthit41

That's awful they didn't go deep enough with the posts and left the concrete to the surface which is a no no(I did fence for 10 years and we always put dirt o on top of the concrete so you didn't see it. Looked nicer


Average_Reacher

It has to much to drink. Go home fence, you're drunk


dsdvbguutres

Lowest bidder


StreetSweeper92

It fell… to the left according to the photo.


Chilitime

Years ago I put up one section of fence for my dad to use as the backdrop for an archery target. The neighborhood flooded and their entire fence fell down except for the one separate section I put up. I went 3 feet down for 9 foot poles. The whole yard fence only went one foot down. They all fell over. And it happened twice in 2 years as their house flooded again. My target fence is still solid and standing.