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2006-09-23 00:49:15 · 2 answers · asked by James C 2 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

2 answers

The answer is pretty simple. Chain link is one of the most forgiving choices for land variations. The chain will "bend" with every variable. The only thing that might have to bend along with it is the top railing, but if you situate an anchor post at each "rise" (either up or down), you can avoid the need to bend the top rail entirely.

As to the installation instructions, you can get a full print-out from the suppliers of the fence itself. The only variable would be, if the fence is going to be situated in sandy soil, you might want to anchor your posts in concrete for stability. Clay soil just requires a post hole digger (pounding the posts into the hard ground would damage the post beyond use), and using the soil itself to backfill once you have the post situated.

Good luck! (My brother and I put in over 400 feet of 5 ft chain link fencing on variable land, in sand that required concrete support. It took us two days.)

2006-09-23 01:27:03 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1.http://www.williamsburgcivicassociation.org/MinorHillLandUseRecommendations.html
2.http://austin.homeconnections.com/tasklocal.Chain-Link-Fence-Install.Austin.Texas.40052.html
3.http://www.servicemagic.com/task.North-Dakota.Chain-Link-Fence-Install.40052.html

2006-09-23 07:54:57 · answer #2 · answered by tatal_nostru2006 5 · 0 0

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