And just having the t-post caps on makes the t-posts a lot safer even if you *don't* put hotwire or electric tape on them (although, since they're right there *ready for* it, it is awfully easy to and would be a big improvement). You just wham 'em on with a couple hammer taps, it is totally not a big festival of tool use
Quote:
That's a good heads-up, but remember that:
a) you could install the ground rods NOW, just leave them there til whenever you start using a charger (hopefully soon);
b) if your ground doesn't freeze so deep that electric fence is frankly kinda useless in winter anyhow, and you have some t-posts driven a couple feet deep, I have seen it work successfully to use about half a dozen t-posts (in series) as your grounds, just using those t-posts your fence itself is made with (this is kinda temporary as it's hard to get a really LASTING good electrical contact with them, but as I say, I've seen it work remarkably adequately)
and/or
c) you can initially install your electric fence as pos-neutral instead of the traditional pos-ground, which requires no ground rod at all and will work no matter how frozen the ground is. Only catch is that it doesn't work quite as well as a traditional pos-ground installation b/c the animal has to simultaneously touch *both* the hotwire *and* the neutral (ground) wire... so a little nudge with the nosie may not zap... but actually leaning on the fence *will*, and after a horse does that they tend to keep their nudgey nosies away too
Pat

Quote:
That's a good heads-up, but remember that:
a) you could install the ground rods NOW, just leave them there til whenever you start using a charger (hopefully soon);
b) if your ground doesn't freeze so deep that electric fence is frankly kinda useless in winter anyhow, and you have some t-posts driven a couple feet deep, I have seen it work successfully to use about half a dozen t-posts (in series) as your grounds, just using those t-posts your fence itself is made with (this is kinda temporary as it's hard to get a really LASTING good electrical contact with them, but as I say, I've seen it work remarkably adequately)
and/or
c) you can initially install your electric fence as pos-neutral instead of the traditional pos-ground, which requires no ground rod at all and will work no matter how frozen the ground is. Only catch is that it doesn't work quite as well as a traditional pos-ground installation b/c the animal has to simultaneously touch *both* the hotwire *and* the neutral (ground) wire... so a little nudge with the nosie may not zap... but actually leaning on the fence *will*, and after a horse does that they tend to keep their nudgey nosies away too

Pat