So I recently built a steel trellis fence to bridge two sections of block wall. I'll ultimately grow some vines on it and it will serve as a way to break-up all of the concrete and block around the pool area.
In retrospect, it would have been a hell of a lot easier to just pay the block guy for an extra 40-ft. Wouldn't have been a big cost difference easier.
The two panels on the end are 4-ft. The other panels are all 8-ft. The frame is angle iron. I secured them using bolts into concrete pillars I poured. Pillars are 10-in in diameter and go 30-in in the ground. Overkill, probably.
Lessons learned:
- I hate anchor bolts. The first half of the panels were secured just using anchor bolts. They wanted to slip all the time. I ended up using anchor bolts + epoxy on the remaining. Way better. I would add epoxy to the hole. Insert bolt. Tighten a little. Let it dry 24-hrs. Then fully tighten the bold
- I should've used something other than flat stock for the bottom of the panels. Angle would have made the structure more rigid.
- This was a big *** project. Each pillar took 5 bags of 80-lb concrete. Plus all the welding and securing. Worst part was messing with anchoring the panels to the concrete columns. Welding was relatively straight forward. I did most of this during the summer in Phoenix. Pretty sure I started to have serious heat illness on at least one occasion.
Enjoy the pics!
In retrospect, it would have been a hell of a lot easier to just pay the block guy for an extra 40-ft. Wouldn't have been a big cost difference easier.
The two panels on the end are 4-ft. The other panels are all 8-ft. The frame is angle iron. I secured them using bolts into concrete pillars I poured. Pillars are 10-in in diameter and go 30-in in the ground. Overkill, probably.
Lessons learned:
- I hate anchor bolts. The first half of the panels were secured just using anchor bolts. They wanted to slip all the time. I ended up using anchor bolts + epoxy on the remaining. Way better. I would add epoxy to the hole. Insert bolt. Tighten a little. Let it dry 24-hrs. Then fully tighten the bold
- I should've used something other than flat stock for the bottom of the panels. Angle would have made the structure more rigid.
- This was a big *** project. Each pillar took 5 bags of 80-lb concrete. Plus all the welding and securing. Worst part was messing with anchoring the panels to the concrete columns. Welding was relatively straight forward. I did most of this during the summer in Phoenix. Pretty sure I started to have serious heat illness on at least one occasion.
Enjoy the pics!