It depends on what kind of animal you are trying to fence in (or out). For an average cattle pasture, I prefer setting them 10 feet apart, so you would need about 150 T-posts. I still prefer setting three six-inch treated wooden posts for each corner; they will hold up better to the tensioning of the fence/barb wire.
9lkms
If the area is a square then a minimum of 1,104.4 feet of fencing would be needed.
A square plot of ground measuring 12 acres would encompass approximately 2925 linear feet of fence-line.
If the shape of the area is a square, it would take 1,181 feet of fencing for the perimeter. If the area is a circle, you will need 1,046 feet of fencing.
You can't tell the linear dimensions from the area. There are an infinite number of shapes that all enclose 40 acres but have different linear dimensions. The smallest possible straight dimensions that can enclose 40 acres occur if the field is square. Each side would be 1,320 feet, and you'd need exactly 1 mile of fence to enclose it. But if some developer owned a rectangular piece of land that was 330-ft wide and 1 mile long, his land would also measure 40 acres, but it would take 2-1/4 miles of fence to enclose it.
80 acres is 880 x 440 feet. Depends on how many cattle and how rough they are on your post settings. Most people around here in Oklahoma put their t-posts roughly 16' apart. This will take 164 posts. A roll of barbed wire will usually run a quarter of a mile of fence. So on a typical 5 wire fence it will take 30 rolls of barbed wire.
9lkms
If it is exactly 40 acres square it will take one mile of fencing or 5,280 feet. However most tracts of land are 40 acres more or less meaning they are approximately 40 acres. 40 acres is one quarter mile long on each side more or less.
If the area is a square then a minimum of 1,104.4 feet of fencing would be needed.
A square plot of ground measuring 12 acres would encompass approximately 2925 linear feet of fence-line.
Perimeter of field = 2*(250+300) = 2*550 = 1150 feet. Therefore, number of post required = 1150/5 = 230 posts.
You don't want to know the square feet of barb wahr. You only want the feet ...how far it is around the outside of the 3 acres.The answer is: It could be a lot of different things.-- The shortest possible amount of fence that can enclose 3 acres is 1,281.5 feet.That's what you need if your 3 acres is in a circle 408 feet across.-- If your 3 acres needs to have straight sides, then the shortest possible fence toenclose it is 1,446 feet. That's what you need if your 3 acres is a square, 361.5 feeton every side.-- If it's not a square, then the more rectangular it is ... long and narrow ... the morefence you need to enclose it.For just one example: If the field is 120' by 1,089', then it covers exactly 3 acres,and you need 2,418 feet of fence to enclose it.The closer to square it is, the less fence you need.
The opposite of the verb "post" is take down, remove, delete.The opposite of a fence post would be the horizontal support, or the rail.The opposite prefix of post- (after) is pre- (before, prior).
If the shape of the area is a square, it would take 1,181 feet of fencing for the perimeter. If the area is a circle, you will need 1,046 feet of fencing.
114,500 acres
0.175
Well I believe if your fence is on someone else is property and they don't like it they can take you to court. And if they can prov it you can be court order to move it.