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<blockquote data-quote="backhoeboogie" data-source="post: 235217" data-attributes="member: 3162"><p>Panels are great and they cost less than a dollar a foot. They are easily moved/removed too. Put them up with T-posts and you can easily pull the posts with a tractor bucket, later on. There are cows that will go over them (only 52 inches tall for standard panels) but they are few and far between. Panels and T-Posts don't burn. If you want to break through the fence, it is easy and it doesn't take out all of the tension like it would if you were to break a passage in a conventional fence. I have fencing that consists of panels and T-Posts in areas and so far I have had no draw backs. </p><p></p><p>When I replace the fence on the road, it is going to be sheep panels in lieu of cow panels. Sheep panels are 5 foot tall and have 4 inch mesh, and run just under $2 a foot. I am going tube steel with a top rail. My cost is going to be about $5 a foot.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="backhoeboogie, post: 235217, member: 3162"] Panels are great and they cost less than a dollar a foot. They are easily moved/removed too. Put them up with T-posts and you can easily pull the posts with a tractor bucket, later on. There are cows that will go over them (only 52 inches tall for standard panels) but they are few and far between. Panels and T-Posts don't burn. If you want to break through the fence, it is easy and it doesn't take out all of the tension like it would if you were to break a passage in a conventional fence. I have fencing that consists of panels and T-Posts in areas and so far I have had no draw backs. When I replace the fence on the road, it is going to be sheep panels in lieu of cow panels. Sheep panels are 5 foot tall and have 4 inch mesh, and run just under $2 a foot. I am going tube steel with a top rail. My cost is going to be about $5 a foot. [/QUOTE]
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