EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
How does gravel allow drainage? Wouldn't gravel allow more water to fill up the hole around the post?
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Nice suggestion - but... sodium pentachlorophenate is so expensive. One could replace the post annually for the cost of pentachlorophenol.Forest Service
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Long-Term Durability of Pressure-Treated Wood in a Severe Test Site
Formally Refereed
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Authors: Stan Lebow, Bessie Woodward, Grant Kirker, Patricia Lebow Year: 2013 Type: Scientific Journal Station: Forest Products Laboratory DOI: https://doi.org/10.1520/acem20120054 Source: Advances in Civil Engineering Materials, Volume 2, Number 1, 2013; pp. 178–188.
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Abstract
Improved estimates of the long-term durability of treated wood products are needed to guide choices about construction materials and allow estimates of design life. This report summarizes the long-term decay and insect resistance of treated wood post and lumber specimens placed in ground contact at a test site of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Product Laboratory in southern Mississippi. Posts treated with relatively low levels of creosote had an estimated durability of 54 years, and slightly less durability was observed in creosote-treated lumber.
Pentachlorophenol-treated posts exhibited durability in excess of 60 years, whereas lumber specimens treated to standard ground-contact retentions had no failures after 39 or 45 years. Posts treated with low retentions of copper naphthenate had an estimated 65-year longevity, but lumber specimens treated to higher retentions of copper napththenate had lower average lives of 27 to 30 years. Low-retention ammoniacal copper arsenate (ACA) posts had an estimated durability of 60 years, whereas stakes treated to retentions of 8 kg/m3 (0.5 lb/ft3) or greater with ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate (ACZA) or ACA have had no failures after 30 and 60 years, respectively. Posts treated with a range of retentions of chromated copper arsenate (CCA-C) have had no failures after 35 years, and stakes treated with CCA-A, CCA-B, or CCA-C to retentions above 7 0 kg/m3 (0.43 lb/ft3) have had no failures after 60, 61, and 40 years, respectively. As a whole, the post and lumber specimens indicate an expected durability of over 50 years for creosote-treated wood and over 60 years for wood treated with pentachlorophenol, copper naphthenate, ACZA, or CCA. Comparison of the results from this site to reports from other locations suggests that these results might underestimate the potential durability in more moderate exposures. In relating these findings to treated commodities, it should be noted that these test specimens have not been subjected to the same mechanical loads or wear and tear associated with in-service structures.
I've heard this from other people and always wondered about it too. My experience as a Contractor, and also on my own farm has shown that the wood that is in contact with the concrete remains brand new looking. There is zero rot, zero deterioration, and in most cases, you can still see the green tint from the pressure treating.My question with concrete around the post is how do you seal off where the post and the cement touch? To me it seems like the water would run down the post and be absorbed into the post and the be held in place by the concrete.
If you use gravel the water can at least drain away into the soil. I just go by what the power company's do in our ares. They use crushed rock to set the post. It's self tightening and it's easy to replace the post when needed. I would think that they have done their research into the most cost effective way of setting posts. From experience I know it's a lot quicker and easier then concrete.
Pole barns are popular around here, and the builders "used to" cement around the post, years later they learned that the post shrunk away from the cement and held water against the post, shortening its life. That practice quit around here long time ago.My question with concrete around the post is how do you seal off where the post and the cement touch? To me it seems like the water would run down the post and be absorbed into the post and the be held in place by the concrete.
These posts are yellow pines I would choose Cedar over yellow pineI have hi tensile fence that was part of a government program. Those posts are punched right in to the ground. over 20 years later I'm pulling them out and reusing and fully expect to get another 1 or 2 decades out of them or more. The rest of the fence posts are locust. There are posts that have fence attached to them that I have never seen used on the farm. That would make those posts 50+- years old and still going strong.
Use the correct posts and don't waste your time or money.