We're going to build up a 4' fence around our property sometime in here in the spring or summer with 4x4 posts.
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I've seen that you should bury 1/3 to 1/2 of the above ground post height; so this would make our hole 1.5-2' deep with gravel below. I've also seen that the diameter of the hole for a 4x4 post should be 12'.. which would make the radius 6'. After going through the math for the hole ( pi x r^2 x h ) it comes out that the hole will have a volume of 1.57 cu ft, but the post itself will take up 0.17 cu ft, so the volume to be filled with concrete will become 1.4 cu ft per post. Right?
The question I have now is that a 50lb bag of fast-setting Quickrete apparently fills 0.375 cu ft after setting. This would mean that we'd need almost 4 bags per post (3.75) - this is also the number that comes up from Quickrete's online calculator. I'm not against this exactly, except that I've seen people saying they've used half a bag per post or a bag a post. How accurate is this and how much should we need? At that rate, we're almost looking at 100+ bags. The 80lb bags fill about 0.6 cu ft and are about a dollar cheaper, is there anything against going with it?
What type of concrete do I need to use, and how much?
TFKTFK6 Answers
Wow! I normally use post hole diggers (6' diameter?) 3 feet deep and ½ a bag of redi-mix per post. I did a free standing section of 6 foot privacy fencing this last summer and we just had a storm of >50mph winds and it is still standing and solid.
So, some of it depends on the quality of your soil but 4 bags per post would be major overbuilding in my opinion.
If you had access to an 8' auger and a full bag per post would still be overbuilding but if you are OCD then that would probably satisfy your worries.
Good luck!
ArchonOSXArchonOSXJust to 'sort of' sidestep the question. You don't need any concrete or gravel whatsoever & all of that nonsense is a complete lie & does nothing. Just dig 6' holes, drop in the posts, double plumb them & backfill & tamp with the dirt you dug or drilled out. I have 3 fences of 6' high that I did 15-years ago & none are failing, falling nor rotting & are unchanged from the day they went in.
Now, concrete used for the purpose of having replaceable posts is different & in that case you do want a 12' hole & likely 2 bags. This I have no problem with, but most no-one does it. Monkey-see-monkey-do says to 'just pop-out that 200-pounds' & do the whole absurdity all over again from scratch.
I am an oklahoma farmer, have built miles of durable barb wire fence. The rule of thumb out here is a fence post hole should bottom out below the frost line, or else the posts will heave out. At my latitude of 36 deg, that is 2 to 3 feet deep. The hole should be wide enough that a tamper-bar will fit between the post and the edge of the hole. That is a long heavy rod of steel with a 2 inch disk on the end. You tamp the hole as you fill it, because the barb wire puts so much tension on the post. Corners and gate entries are fortified with H-braces, an extremely rigid structure made of 9 gauge wire, two posts 8 feet apart, and an 8 foot pipe (the center of the H). Concrete would probably help act as a 'dead-man'
here in ontario, the code requirement for any fence adjoining a property line in any incorporated municipality is an 8' dia hole with either a 2' steel or 4' pressure treated spruce post set to a minimum depth of 48' below grade. the post must be set into either compacted sand or mpa20 or higher concrete, and the post must be embedded full depth minus the diameter of the excavated hole. this is for any fence up to a maximum of 6', which in most towns is the maximum allowed by municipal bylaws. anything over that height requires an engineer. if its solely on your land (more than 6' within the surveyed lot line) then there are absolutely no requirements or stipulations.
personal privacy advocatepersonal privacy advocateConcrete specs from manufacturers ALWAYS use amounts and measurements that produce a structural footer for supporting decks, pole barns, observation posts, flood zone pole houses, and structures. I promise you they are NOT going to say 'none' if you ask how much concrete for stretched wire / mesh fencing posts but in most cases 'none' is correct - just keep the hole's diameter as small as possible to fit the post and a packer able to fit around the tight sides. When DOES a fence post need concrete footing? Framed up wooden privacy fences 5ft or higher should use posts footed in concrete. Stretched wire and mesh fencing over 100ft long might benefit from concrete set end posts and when the fence turns more than 5 degs the post it turns on should be set in concrete. Use an H brace on both sides of this turn pole if the fence is so long it needs more tension to maintain form - good thing, as this is what makes the fence strong and effective. Slack fence droops, bends, and is easily compromised. Tesioned fence is rigid, maintains form when push and rubbed on, and you can use t stake poles every 10-12 ft between wooden poles set in dirt once every 60 - 100 ft. as the tension holds itself mostly up already.
Concrete is typically used when you don’t want someone attempting to steal or otherwise rip out your posts.
For a 4’ fence, wholly unnecessary except for those reasons.
The Evil Greebo![Concrete Concrete](https://www.gigacalculator.com/img/calculators/concrete-slab.png)