Electric fence corner insulator

TheRanger

Member
Location
SW Scotland
Have a permanent electric fence that I've just upgraded from plastic wire to HT steel wire. One of the corners is done with a plastic corner insulator similar to the following photo.

1714115174604.jpeg

When finished I stupidly wound the plastic wire up under tension through the corner insulator and it seems to have damaged/worn it internally and will need replaced. Having tensioned the whole fence, and with this insulator typically being right in the middle, is there any type of corner insulator I can use with HT 2mm wire that doesn't need to be threaded through the entire fence line?
 

steveR

Member
Mixed Farmer
Have a permanent electric fence that I've just upgraded from plastic wire to HT steel wire. One of the corners is done with a plastic corner insulator similar to the following photo.

1714115174604.jpeg

When finished I stupidly wound the plastic wire up under tension through the corner insulator and it seems to have damaged/worn it internally and will need replaced. Having tensioned the whole fence, and with this insulator typically being right in the middle, is there any type of corner insulator I can use with HT 2mm wire that doesn't need to be threaded through the entire fence line?
For conventional steel or polywire, I cut a slot in the insulator to allow the wire to slip through. I undoubtedly weakens the insulator, but is fine. Not sure how good that would work with HT...?
 

Poorbuthappy

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Devon
For conventional steel or polywire, I cut a slot in the insulator to allow the wire to slip through. I undoubtedly weakens the insulator, but is fine. Not sure how good that would work with HT...?
Thinking about it, there are some brands of that style insulator that have a slot already cut in them.
 

neilo

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Montgomeryshire
Would something like that work? doesn't look as if it would stay in place very well that way round.


1714115248419.png

Looks like a recipe for shorting between the live wire and the retaining wire. There can't be much gap between them?

I was going to post a link to the RAPPA slotted insulators, but @Poorbuthappy beat me to it. That's what I use for polywire sheep fencing on corners.
 

Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
just got to watch pulling up 2mm as it cuts more l;ike a cheese wire than like 2.5 or 3 obvs. thicker wire

easy to cut it somewhere tidy rethread through the insulator and put in a gripple or a crimp is the answer to your prob. gripple ideal for retensioning of course.
 

Dry Rot

Member
Livestock Farmer
I was thinking about this question today as I was doing my own. It's not really a good idea to attach with a single insulator at a corner as the wire will resist sliding round the corner. Better to cut and tie off both sides to it's own insulator and tensioner. So, yes, double the cost and double the work -- but twice as good. :confused: (That's assuming permanent).
 

Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
Electric wire shouldn't be pulled tight enough to be cutting through them.
no it doesnt need to be as highly strung because the electric does the work repelling the animal not tensioin resistance, better to pull up modestly when building the fence line , then later take out any droop ,gripples are ideal for this, and they wont break because theres less strain involved than ordinary fence tensioning .
,
 
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