We Found The Guy Who Can Build Fence By Himself

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- [Mark] We're in England somewhere. Somewhere. With Peter Regwell, with PDR Contracting. - [Peter] Yep. - [Mark] And we're going to, kind of, see what Peter does here. How things are done, other places. I underestimate how hard it is to drive on the opposite side of the road, and navigate at the same time. (both screaming) Thanks for having us, Peter. - [Peter] You're welcome. - Don't give him a hard time about the way he talks. (Peter laughs) He thinks it's normal. - We're all normal. It's all you. - It's all us. You guys are the originals. The OG's. (hip hop music) ♪ Ding Dong. ♪ Anyhow, you call it a kit. This is your kit. - Yeah, your kit. - This is probably the backbone of your operation? - Yeah. So, I guess the main machine for what we get up to. - And you were telling us earlier that you have the same exact problem we do. And that is there's nobody to work. - Yeah. There's real shortage of skilled labor here. - That's, a common theme in the US as well. How can I get the most done with the least amount of people? - Like, I guess I explain it, like the other post drivers, they're post drivers. Whereas a SoloTrak I'd described more, as like, a fencing machine. It does the whole job. So I guess start front to back. It's got a four-way blade on it. So up, down, then tilt, which helps with the netter. - [Mark] Oh yeah. - [Peter] You got the, the netter, the back frame and then the blade, the tension ram on it as well. So, one of the arguments, from guys, about using tractioners for pulling up netting is, you know, they run out of, they don't have the traction or the weight to pull it. So you can kind of strain this up as much as you can with the tracks. And then before you lose it, then you can drop it down, get it stable, and then push it out with the hydraulic. Yeah. And that re-, that makes a huge difference. You've basically got the netter, which unhooks pretty easy. And then back frame, you got the set of pallet forks that drop into a little couple of slots and pin on. So then you can move packs of posts around. And then if you want to drop it into a-, or turn into, like a cradle, it's got a couple of holes in the front and you click them on, becomes like a U-shaped cradle. And then, like you say, you've got four-way tilt, so you can tilt when you're doing the netting if you're on a bit of a slope. So, and then you've got the blade which, has been real handy, actually. I never had a blade in the old ones. And it's surprising how much you use that (indistinct). You've got like a double gateway, and it's going to be a foot out the ground over here,. and you can just you can mess about and grade it off. Or if you've got lumps of stuff that farmers left and not cleared. 'Cause he's, "Yeah, I'll clear all that," and then he hasn't. - [Mark] He won't. - [Peter] Yeah, it's been real handy. - [Mark] This is obviously reversible too. It looks like it swings right around this. - Yeah. So that swings around the other way. So you can run out and strain from both sides. - [Allen] This is a spike? - [Peter] That's a rock spike for running, most common size for post around here is five by three or six by three. - [Mark] And I can see you've got your bush peg up here. You've got a stretcher here. I mean everything's got a spot. - Tool storage was a big thing. Like with all the other ones we'd had before. You kind of struggle with storage and we've got the box mate up for the tops. It's got spare opens and belts and you know, kind of your emergency bits. And then under there you've got, like, decent storage for your crimps and crimpers and stuff, When you're on the line, You don't have to wander back to the truck all the time. - And then back here's kind of the workhorse. Is this part of the air compressor set up? - So yeah, that's your air tank and your compressor. Oh yeah, that's your air compressor just there. Yeah, I've gotten what, two and a half thousand hours on it and it's, you know, been no trouble. - Worked really well, huh? Now, you're saying this one has remote as well. - And I said to Simon, like, "If I'm gonna buy one off you, it's gotta be remote." I've gotta have it on remote. I've just got too used to it. - [Mark] So, I see you have a little ball down here. Is that- - [Peter] Oh, you saw the one on the front too. It's got a tow bar front and back. So you drag your trailer around the fields if it's a bit too wet with the truck. - Does this thing swing out? - It's got a couple of positions underneath. You can take the bolt out, if you prefer it nearer you or whatever. - [Mark] . How many kilos is this? - 340, that one. I had a 400 on the old machine and I was adamant, "Oh I can't, I'm not going down a size." You know. I want the same or more. So, actually for balance and for hitting power, this has worked out pretty good, I tend to find. I'll fire her up, you can see. - [Mark] Yeah. - [Peter] How it runs - [Mark] Yeah, I'm curious. You have my curiosity peaked. - [Unidentified] Can we start up, can we? Can we see it run? Can we? (engine starts) (observers laugh and cheer) - [Peter] So yes, (indistinct) It's got a big ram back here. It's got quite a lot of power. It's quite a large ram. - [Mark] And how many- how tall a post can you get on? - [Peter] I have four meter just under 14 foot. Thirteen, six. - [Mark] 14 foot. Yeah. So you can get on top of a 14 foot tall post. Very similar to other drivers. - [Peter] So that's your max height. - [Dan] So can you run your auger with your drive plate on? - Yeah. Oh yeah, you can. So with it out the way, you can stress that on there, but you don't have to do that. I just, sometimes I, forget. If you're busy augering. - [Mark] That's really cool. (machine running) - So, you can put all the weight in the machine, like on the auger tip. - [Unidentified] Ohhhh! - But if you're drilling rock, like you want put some- or harder ground, you want to put a lot of weight on, you can put quite a lot of weight on with it. And if you wanna put more weight on, you can slew it round to the back. And as you push down if you've got your blade down, you can get a lot of pressure. - Oh, yeah. So, how much slew does this have? - So it's got two hundred degree slews, the way it's set up. But for driving it, you got a little bit of forward slew, like, if you just need to get into that little corner. Or you've got something, and you just need to push it over a bit. (engine running) - [Mark] Oh yeah. Back to there. And you say you've got about 24 inches telescoping? - Yeah, it's about, I'm sure it's 600 mil, which is about 24 inch. - [Mark] Seems very well balanced. - [Peter] Yeah. It is, yeah. Oh, that's your, um, your air- - [Allen] Oh, your air hose. - [Peter] Air hose, that's on a reel. Again, that's been a nice (indistinct) I got sick of hauling a compressor in and out of the truck all the time. Which is why I really wanted a compressor on the machines. - So what's today's project? - We've got little run, at the far side, we can do with you guys. With that little bit, and doing the netting, you should see, kind of, what this thing does. - [Mark] That'd be good. Well, let's go to work. Let's get dirty! (upbeat instrumental music) - [Allen] I lost a glove. I lost them both. - So one of the things I'm amazed by, is I look down this fence, and it looks really, really good and straight. The only problem I have with this, is this post, because it's a driven post, it is extremely loose. Like, I could probably pull this thing out by hand. - Just do it now. - Just- you want me to pull this out? - Just get it over with, yeah. - Okay, okay, here I go. (Mark groans) - Okay. No, it's not going anywhere. How deep is this in the ground? - Three foot. - Three foot. So this is three feet in the ground, in this clay and they don't move. They are freaking so-lid. And so, this is just for all you people out there, that think a driven post is not as good as a tamp post. - [Betty White] You know who you are. - If you were to tamp this post, in this muddy mucky ground, how well would that work? - Yeah, not well you could probably- - I could probably move that around, and pop it right out, right? - Yep. - So, just to stir the pot a little bit, I'm gonna tell you that driven posts are better. So, there's a reason that we drive stuff. - [Uncle Fester] There! I said it! - But onto another subject. We're getting ready to do a brace. Now what style of brace are we going to do? - [Peter] Yeah, like you guys are saying, you call it a round space, we call it an angle strut. - [Mark] Alright, well let's do this. - [Peter] Alright. - What he's getting ready to do he-ah is... I don't even know, is that Australian? I have such a horrible British accent. I give up, I'm not going to talk British. But what he's getting ready to do here, is he's going to use this post knocker, 'cause that's what they call them here. They call them knockers. That's a nice bit of kit. And he's gonna use his nice bit of kit, post knocker, to-. Right in the ground, just like that. Look at that. And he did all that by himself. (machine tapping) Can we take just a quick minute to appreciate how good this looks? Considering this gentleman didn't use a level at all. There was no level, like, look at all those insulators. That is a thing of beauty. So, what he was talking about is, he wants this strut from a third to half height. He prefers it to be forcing down into the soil, more than going more laterally. So he tends to put his strut just to touch higher than, maybe, some other people do. So he's going half height on this, which is going to be about two feet up. Which will give him a more aggressive angle. Now other people like a nice low strut, and that's gonna be, again, whatever your soil conditions may be, and what's ever suitable in your area. So he's gonna drive his foot, and he is using a railroad tie for that, because he finds that that just holds up better in the soil. Also notice, because he is often time working alone, he has a clamp here to help support his work, so that he can keep working with limited amounts of hands. So that's how he's able to do what he does. Only having one person. You'll also notice he's going to, 'cause he wants to replicate the angle of that post. He wants that post-, or that strut, to be flat up against that railroad tie, once he gets it all driven down in the ground. You'll see that gap. He's trying to get that nice and even. (machine knocks) I think this man's about to save himself some work. That's what I think he's getting ready to happen right here. I think he's trying to be lazy. We'll see, let's see how this pans out. (metal grinds) I freaking love lazy people. I love lazy people. Laziness is the like, it's the mother of all invention. That is, it's freaking brilliant! - [Peter] It's awesome isn't it? - That's so freaking brilliant. I love that. - Yeah - You're welcome. That didn't even cost you a thing. - That's courtesy of Joe Morgan. He come up with the idea. Yeah, to be fair. - Hey, all my best ideas were stolen too. - Oh, absolutely. Yeah. - And that's brilliant. - Yeah. - You're the first one I've ever seen do that. - Yeah, there's not many. You're a man after my own heart in that, I just can't stand digging holes ...it just...it does me right in. (Mark laughs) And then, I think I'm kind of backward to most guys in the UK. They normally make their struts, they'll shape them, they'll mortice them and then they'll drive that thing after. I find, if I tried that, you only have to have that post wander away from you a little bit, and then you know you're not getting enough pressure on the post. So I started doing it like this. And you can also, again, get the angle your mortice to bang on or you know, nick as near as you can, without kind of, guessing or changing that. So like I say, some people think I'm a bit backwards doing this, but it works for me. Know it won't work for everyone. - [Mark] Trust me. If they hate what you're doing, they'll tell you about it. - [Peter] Oh yeah, I bet. Yeah (chainsaw running) (planer running) A lot of guys will roll their eyes at planing, think it's unnecessary. And it is unnecessary. You don't have to do it. You still get more- It will still hold a strainer, without planing it. There's two things I like with planing, it's easy for me to mark and keep neat. But also, I think it stops the water coming in to the timber, so much. You kinda have that rough- and it seems to sit, with a lot of water in this, like, rough texture. Whereas you smooth it off, and I noticed it when we were painting up the mortices, after you plane them, it doesn't take a lot and it sort of all dribbles off. But you leave it rough, and you have to put loads on, to get it to all go in there and, you know, it holds a lot of moisture. So, I think it can only help, for the longevity of the joint. Yeah, that's the StrainRite fencing- Yeah, I think that's the standard one. Yeah, it's been good. I got it 'cause a lot of other fencers seem to use them, and like them. So, yeah. Nice, good, tough chisel. So, we've got a couple intermediates to knock in, and then we can tie a wire on and roll this out, and stretch it up. So, do you guys want to have a go at knocking these few inters in? Does he always do this? Seems to disappear when you guys are doing all the work. - [Dan] Oh, yes. - [Peter] I'd noticed that. (laughing) - As soon as the work starts, poof! He's gone. - Poof, gone. Yeah, I've just seen that, doesn't he? - [Allen] Oh, yeah. Well, look at that time. - [Peter] Yeah. (laughing) It's coffee time. Huh? - [Dan] So, you want me to use the level? - Yeah. - Or you just want me to use my eye? - Well with these rustic ones, I tend to find, like, a level can lie to you a little bit, you know? Mast has a bubble on there. - Oh, okay. - Center bubbles. And you've got, obviously, drop weight, side shift in and out's the first one. Back shift, which is forward and back, is the second one. And then your two tilts. I'm sure that'll make your head spin for a minute, until you get the hang of it. But you got enough to deal with probably. - No, no, no. I got this. - It's like watching someone drive one of your children. It's, yeah...I'm just trying not to look. - Don't worry, I got this. (upbeat instrumental music) (machine pounding) - [Peter] I'll hold this down a bit. Yeah, go on. Right. Right. Right. Right. Yep. (machine pounding) And you could run it until that meets that edge. (machine pounding) It's good. - (indistinct) - [Peter] And it'll hook on there. Oh. (laughing) We'll say the American did that one, it'll be fine. (upbeat instrumental music) - Yeah, you've showed me a couple tricks already. Like, I'd never even thought to cross the chain like that. - Yeah. Yeah. It just grips it to- And then on the big ends, like, if you're pulling out a lot of fence. You've got these forestry hooks and then you can just- And then you can be- If you're running down a line, normally, I'd do it with a digger if it's here. But if you've got like a 200 meter stretch, it's not worth bringing the machinery. It can just- Just fling, yank it out and it just, once you take it off, it'll just flip off and then backtrack to the next one. Yank that one out. So if you're doing a lot, you know, it's worth chucking it on, but you're just tweaking up a little bit, I just use that. That's, kind of like, your every day chain. - Yep. - And something else that bush pin guide does, that you like. - This is all free. You're not going to have to pay a thing, for all of this. All these ideas are free. Steal away - Particularly on strains, if you're fighting that- I could have done it on that one over there, I guess. I should have done it for you. And as you're driving them, like, it would slide on the rollers. It works really well. 'Cause if it's really hard, or if you're belting the crap out of it, and you want it to free flow. - [Mark] Very smart. - Yeah, they work really well. (upbeat guitar music) We'll go down that far side and tie it off, and run that out until it stops. And then we'll come back up here and we'll tie here, and, kind of, run down to it and, kind of, meet in the middle. (upbeat guitar music) (engine running) - [Peter] This is the really long boring part. - [Mark] This is the worst part. - [Peter] This is the worst part. Stripping all the knots. - [Mark] Stripping all the knots. And of course he's using the wonderful Knipex. - [Peter] The only way to go. - The only. The official cutter of professional- - [Peter] Of fencers everywhere. There you go. - The OG. - The OG. - Sorry, come this side. (post rammer pounding) - [Mark] If you're wondering what he is using there, that is a StrainRite post rammer. Link in the description below. - The only post rammer. - The only. - OG. - It's the OG for sure. (machine running) - [Mark] Do you get the people here in England, or the UK, that basically think what you're doing, and how you're going about it, it's rubbish too? - [Peter] Yep! they think it's a completely waste of time. Meeting some of the really good fencers around the country, and improving how you do it. You can get lost in it too. Like, you know, you can go so far, you're trying to do competition spec fence, daily. - [Mark] Yeah and not get paid for it. - [Peter] And that's- yeah, exactly. I think a lot of guys, go through that process where they start to get better, they do it as well as they can, realize that you can't make any money doing it quite this well. So they kind of, get back to a standard that's professional, but you can still turn a good product out for a price. And, you know, it's finding that balance, I guess. All right. (engine starts) - [Peter] And we did, I'd say about 5000 meters. And I think it was like, 1,200 crimps or something on that job. And I was like, ah, if we get the job, and I can get it, I'm ordering one of these things. So we did. It just turned it from a chore, into like, just another task. And time's money, isn't it? - [Mark] I've never got a play with one of those. You mind if I try it. - [Peter] Yeah, of course. Yeah. It was me being greedy. Yeah, absolutely. - [Mark] That's the way to crimp. - That is the way to crimp. Absolutely. Fill your boots. We've got another one to do when we join up in the middle, so you can do that too. Let's try not to crimp your fingers together, that's all I'll say. - [Mark] Yeah, that's another quality product, brought to you by StrainRite. - [Peter] There you go. - [Mark] Boys from New Zealand know how to do it. - [Dan] How long does the battery last? - [Peter] I've not run it out yet. It gets- Oh, I'll run it for like a week, and then it might drop one bar, and then I'll just chuck it on charge. I've not run it down, flat out. (machine running) - He was going to be doing this on his own today anyhow. - [Peter] There you go. Yeah, give it a flick and check it, how it is on the corner. (hammer tapping) (electronic crimping) (machine running) - Hey, we hope that you have enjoyed learning a little bit about how to fence here, in England. And how Peter does things, here at PDR Contracting LTD. And a little bit about the SoloTrak fencing machine. Which I think is very unique. That's why it's been Peter's machine of choice, here, for the last couple years. And we learned a ton of tricks, about how you're trying to save some steps and save time. And I really appreciate that about your operation, because time's money and labor sucks. - Yep, absolutely. - So it was really great hanging out with you. - No worries. - Appreciate you having us over. Yeah, let's go to a pub and maybe- - Pub Sounds good. - Pub, pub. Until next time, I'm Mark with SWI. - I'm Dan. - I'm Allen. - And I'm Peter. And you have a good dang day. (fire crackling)
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Channel: SWI Fence
Views: 365,934
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: solotrack, post driver, fencing machine, one-man fencing machine, one-man fencing, build fence by yourself, fence installation, modern fence methods, fence-building methods, building ag fence, building agricultural fence, ag fence, agricultural fence, fence installation business, fence installation machine
Id: NF9Y1_5QXcw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 18min 56sec (1136 seconds)
Published: Sat Mar 11 2023
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