No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroAnclaje de base de hormigón resistente 4x4, punta de poste de valla en forma de U para hormigón 4x4, anclaje de base de poste de metal negro recubierto de polvo
Zachary
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2025
I recently purchased the Wet Concrete Foundation Post Base Holder Support, and it has been a fantastic addition to my backyard deck! This post base holder is designed to provide a secure and sturdy connection between wood posts and concrete foundations, making it perfect for building fences, decks, railings, and pergolas. The finish looks great as well although in my case these will be hidden.
E.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de enero de 2025
I have a lot of posts to install along a somewhat non-traditional landscape, so I’ve come across a few different iterations of post brackets for ground contact. The ones I’m most familiar with are Simpson strong tie branded and ones that are anchored with expansion bolts into cured concrete. These post brackets are a bit different in that they have metal ‘pins’ that get screwed into the black metal frame at the bottom and are intended to be set into wet concrete.I find expansion bolts to be a bit tiresome to install, so these were an interesting change-up. I do have minor concerns that the ‘pins’ could be a weak point as far as possible breaking off in the future since the base itself sits flush with the concrete rather than being embedded and the pins not being through-bolted. So far they’re holding up for some 4x4 posts that will secure slats and cross braces for a wooden fence panel. My corner posts and a few others along the line are buried and cemented like traditional line posts, so I’m not overly concerned but I’ll be curious to see how they hold up over time.
Albawab
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 29 de diciembre de 2024
A product is only as good as its ability to do that which it’s made for, and I’m not sure this will do the job. I was considering setting up a wooden fence and saw these post holders and thought they’d be nice to use instead of setting the post into concrete. It’s advertised as having rebar spikes (in the installation details) that secure into the concrete, but these are not rebar spikes, they’re thin threaded rods. I really don’t believe that it’ll be enough to hold the fence posts with all the force on the fence from winds and what not. I can’t give it a one star because I haven’t actually used them and they might hold, but I’m not willing to waste the time and find out they don’t. As I said, I don’t believe they will and that’ll be time and money lost. Also, the metal bracket itself isn’t the thickest, and the holes on both sides are perfectly lined up with each other, so I can’t use anything longer than a 2 inch screw to secure either side. It’s possible that this would work, but I’m not convinced and so it’s a 3 star from me.
Denise
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 23 de diciembre de 2024
These are very nice looking posts. The anchors are great for concrete mix. I want to see how it stands Uber time, but right now is very easy to use. Functions, really well, looks very nice, and it's great quality. Doesn't scratch too easily and hopefully won't rust
Rick E.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 11 de diciembre de 2024
These 4x4 post anchors are designed to be set into wet concrete and then you attach the post. be sure to attach the brached to the threaded rods BEFORE putting them into the concrete or there will be no way to screw them on afterwards (hopefully that is obvious, but just in case....).It provides 4 holes for screws, and one bigger one that could be used to put a threaded bolt through. Powder coating seemed decent and the steel is reasonably thick. Should hold the 4x4 in place well - it really doesn't need much shear strength as the overall structure should hold it all together and provide stability/rigidity.If you already have a concrete pad and still want to use these, you could probably remove the threaded rods and either drill holes for the parts that stick down, or just remove them with a grinder, cut off tool, or drill them out. Might not be as "clean" of an install, but it could be done.For the "obvious" use case, I would prefer it to have all 4 sides enclosed. But this 2 sided approach does provide more flexibility - you can use it to secure the base of a wall or something too (running the 4x4 horizontally). In that use case, 4 sides would not work so this definitely has its purposes.Overall, probably not the best option or value I have seen out there (depends on what specials are being offered) but it seems it would get the job done.
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