Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.hippy
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2025
Simply the best spur availableIf your fence is leaning, you need to take a hammer drill get the concrete out like 25% of a pie, put some rebar in existing cement use a cement drill, attach spur, and put in concrete. It is simplier then it sounds, this will allow you to set fence back to straight if it is leaning.Nobody will do this $$, but if you install these when you install a fence, it will easily extend the fence life by double. It will make a 25 year fence a 50 year fence plus. The only other thing you would need to do it cover the top of the fence part especially if they have the top board seam on it. Spray the bottoms with permethrin every couple years, I wouldnt doubt it could last 100 years.
David Miller
Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2024
I replaced the fence boards along the back of the property, but wasn't planning to replace a few of the less secured posts. The fence just keeps the deer out of the garden area ... and along with the pickets, I was replacing the horizontal 2x4's, so the fence would be stiffening up anyway. My goal was to not dig post holes. So I wanted to try this anchor to see what it would do for one of weaker posts. The fence is easily 10-15 years old, all of the posts were set in rather narrow but adequately deep concrete footings.The weaker post had developed a small gap between the wood & concrete as the wood developed some decay (still good redwood inside). it had been set in a fairly small concrete footing. I reamed out a vertical track along the bottom of the post so that I could put the anchor down the side of the post - into the footing, while driving the the other leg into the ground (around the concrete post). Took more than one try to get it right. Put a couple of lag screws in to secure it to the post. Indeed, the added anchor did provide additional support to the post.If I hadn't also replaced the horizontal 2x4's, I'm not sure if the anchor alone would have done enough to feel it was a complete solution ... but it was certainly easier / quicker than taking out the post and cementing another in its place, and if it helps me get another 10-15 years out of the fence ... the new owners by then will have appreciated it.
Brittany
Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2024
This comes out so far on the stability side that it was not useful on most of my posts due to the driveway on one side and a walking path on the other.If you can find an area where it fits, it is QUITE heavy and easy to stake down into the ground. However, if you have rocky West Texas soil, you will likely need to dig down first before you can install it. This can also be an issue if you have a sprinkler line in the ground for fenceline bushes.If you are in a situation with nothing on the side of the fence you want to place this on, this could be perfect for you. Installation isn't difficult, and once installed, it is sturdy. I'm not sure about the quality with that price for a single post stabilizer. It depends on the cost comparison of replacing the post. This is a lot easier and faster than replacing the post, for sure.4 Stars
Nina
Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2024
My big wood post fence finally rotted out and fell over in a couple sections. What makes my situation tricky is that my fence is on an extremely steep incline. I purchased a set of these and they repaired my fence perfectly. If you really drive them in and install them properly you should be all set for quite a while.
Wendy Williams
Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2024
Strong and heavy duty. These went right in the ground with no issue. They look and feel like they will last a lifetime. The number of pre-drilled holes, and location, in the anchor made affixing it to the fence post an easy task.
T Paul
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
The product steel was NOT a quality material. Did not penetrate the ground even when watering to loosen the surface.
Donald P.
Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2024
This is a strong piece of metal, but because the soil was rocky I just couldn't get it right next to the post. Finally hammered so hard with the sledge hammer that it started to bend. I don't want to say this wouldn't be useful, because it should work in regular soil. I just didn't do the job for me. Seems expensive for one post repair.
D_Chap
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2024
The wind blew down a whole stretch of fence (the old posts rotted at ground level). Drove these into the ground, reattached the broken posts, fence repaired. Most of the time, the existing concrete was not an issue, although I had to chip it away on two posts - not the fault of these repair kits. Only complaint was the provided drill bit broke off inside the fourth hole I drilled in one post. I had to redrill all of them because I couldn't get the broken drill bit out.
Recommended Products