beenthere
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2001
- Messages
- 18,589
- Location
- Southern Wisconsin, USA
- Tractor
- JD_4x2_Gator, JD_4300, JD_425, JD_455 AWS, added JD_455, JD_110, JD_X485(sold)
To reconstitute anything to compete with natural wood from trees is difficult, and more expensive, at best. The tree grows itself into a tough material and, at little mfg. cost to shape it to the dimension wanted, doesn't take extra electricity, oil, or gas to make a product. Wood fibers grow much stronger than anything that is melted or pressed together. Plastic deck boards need more joists to support the same load and reduce the elasticity (bouncy feeling) when walking on it. Pressed (extruded) plastic fence posts would likely bend (but maybe not break) when under load or over a period of time.
I have wood posts still up in a fence line that were put in in 1965. They were sawn on four sides, which took a minimum of energy to produce. They are near the end of their life span and will need replacing soon.
I have wood posts still up in a fence line that were put in in 1965. They were sawn on four sides, which took a minimum of energy to produce. They are near the end of their life span and will need replacing soon.