Because a barbed wire fence just doesn't get the point across to some people. I have super flimsy stamped sheet metal gates that are ready to buckle under their own weight. Or your typical ranch gate movable fence sections where you have 3 or 4 lengths of barbed wire connectedto a stick held in place with a fence post on one end and loops of barbed wire at the other. Those are fine for inside the outer perimeter. I have at least one of these at the road. For now I'm leaving the flimsy gates open and ranch gates inplace incase there is a grass fire so the fire department can get in, at least until I get the weeds chopped back. I'm thinking remake the gates out of galvanized fence posts, rebar, pump drive shaft, just junk laying around. Then put hedgehogs on a chain inside the gates, let the grass grow high enough to cover them in that spot.
fabricate yer own HESCO bastions plus decorative stuff n things on either side of em plus a 10 foot moat behind em
Has anyone tried filling the IBC water containers with sand? The ones on a pallet with wire cage surrounding them and a 275 gallon liner. The clean ones run about $75 here and I have been offered ones that have held chemicals or plastic pellets for free. They are roughly 4 foot cube.
In VERY crude terms, sand will be twice as heavy as water, which means the forces on the bottom of the sides will be twice as high as with water and might crack thru. (Yes, sand can behave as a fluid under some conditions, as when shaking while being moved.) Maybe twice the forklift to move 'em?
I'm with ghrit on this one. The plastic may not make adequate containment for the sand mass, and what may be installed by forklift, may be removed by forklift.....albeit under aimed small arms fire in a WROL environment if the obstacle is appropriately sited and installed.
IBC tote will hold sand just fine if you don't move it after filling it. I have a series of "tanglefoots" in the woods behind the house and these have been way more effective than the barbed wire. Just wire, paracord, fishing line, steel cable and anything else similar I had lying around wrapped between trees, balled up and anchored down, and loops hanging from branches.
Thank you Chell. Pretty formidable obstacle. They appear simple to make with three pieces of angle iron.
Park two old cars just inside the gate to either side like they were moved off the driveway there. Shoot the living eff out of them and then set on fire. Should keep most people from entering unwanted.
Neither.....just cruisin' through Google images....it seemed like the one that best suited the theme of the thread.
Once read somewhere that pieces of tubing, steel or stainless, cut off at about a 45 degree angle and mounted upright (perhaps welded to a steel plate) would flatten a tire pretty much instantly. The obstacles above look pretty nasty. The top one appears as though it would be difficult to back up in a vehicle once it had been run over. I put up a steel tubing type cattle gate at the entrance to my property about two years ago. Previously there was only a heavy chain stretched between two wooden posts. One of the posts rotted off at the base and had to be replaced - twice. Third time I used a concrete-filled steel post (right side of photo). Sturdier than the flimsy sheet metal gate shown above by OP4 (I'd replace it too), the steel tubing cattle gate could still be rammed with a pickup truck. But it is more of a deterrent than the chain was.
As of today I have about 110' of 6 inch well pipe to up grade area denial. The who knows how much 6'', 4" and 3" buried for horizontal delivery to watering points.
I thought about burying angle iron in a way that if the gate were rammed it would come out of the ground and go under a vehicle and immobilize it. In front of the gate. Connected to the gate posts. I have considered a vehicle that would be parked on the property blocking the road.I thought about making it at an angle so it would roll downhill(light grade) to a stop blocking the road and be pulled back with a winch out of the way.
Cutting torch, welder and a grinder could bring to fruition some really interesting ideas with that much material to work.