A lot of “chain link fence installation” searches now include words like compliant, code, security-grade, commercial, because owners want a fence that is (1) harder to bypass, (2) easier to maintain, and (3) defensible in an audit or bid. ASTM F567 is often referenced in this context because it defines installation practices (site preparation, post setting, bracing, rails/tension wire, ties/clips, fabric, barbed wire, and gates) rather than just describing the fabric.
Security guidance commonly emphasizes controlling the bottom edge to reduce crawl-under/lift points. UFC guidance calls for fabric to extend to within about 2 inches of firm ground, with options to anchor the bottom using methods like bottom rails, tension wire, or curbs depending on requirements.
Security-focused references often cite a baseline like 9-gauge fabric with mesh openings no larger than 2 inches per side for perimeter fencing where delay and deterrence matter (while still preserving visibility).
Industry security recommendations explain that as mesh opening decreases, it generally becomes harder and slower to penetrate—useful for sites where “delay time” is the goal, not just marking a boundary.
Mark corners, ends, and gate locations first (terminal posts define everything).
Decide whether you need a “clear zone” for visibility and surveillance (common in security layouts).
Call your local utility locating service before digging (in the U.S., this is initiated through 811).
What causes most “wavy” chain link fences isn’t the mesh—it’s post movement after tensioning.
Use stronger terminal posts at corners/ends/gates.
Brace corners and gate posts because they absorb the pull from stretched fabric.
Don’t tension fabric until your post foundations are stable and cured (rushing is a common failure mode described in professional installation practices).
Top rail improves alignment and stiffness.
Bottom tension wire reduces lift points and helps keep the fabric tight to grade (especially important for pets, security, and cleaner long-term appearance).
ASTM F567 frames these as part of standard installation practice rather than “optional extras,” because they materially affect performance.
A common professional method is:
Unroll fabric along the fence line.
Weave a tension bar through the end diamonds.
Attach the tension bar to the terminal post using tension bands and hardware.
This creates a solid anchor for stretching the fabric evenly.
Use a stretcher bar and come-along (or equivalent). Proper stretching is the difference between a fence that stays straight and one that sags within weeks.
A widely used installation guide describes stretching until the fence has a slight give when squeezed—overstretching can deform the diamonds and stress hardware, while understretching guarantees sag.
After tensioning:
Tie the fabric to line posts at consistent intervals.
Tie fabric to the top rail (and bottom wire if used) to prevent “oil-canning” and loose sections.
ASTM F567 treats ties/clips as core installation components because uneven or sparse tie spacing is a structural weakness, not just a cosmetic issue.
If security or animals matter, treat the bottom as a design feature:
Keep fabric close to firm grade (security guidance often calls out ~2 inches as a target).
Use bottom tension wire or a curb/grade beam where appropriate.
For higher-risk sites, industry recommendations note that burying fabric can reduce forced lift points (but consider corrosion and maintenance).
Install gates after fabric is tensioned so latches align correctly and the gate doesn’t become the “weak link.” ASTM F567 includes gates as part of the overall installation practice for a reason—many perimeter failures happen at gates.
Usually one (or more) of these:
Posts weren’t braced like true terminal posts (fabric tension slowly pulls them out of plumb).
Fabric was not stretched enough (or stretched unevenly).
Tie spacing was too wide or inconsistent.
Bottom edge wasn’t controlled, so the fence “walks” with wind/push.
These are exactly the failure modes spec-driven practices are designed to prevent.
If the site is coastal, industrial, or constantly wet, corrosion resistance matters more than aesthetics. Security guidance and industry recommendations frequently recognize coated options as practical for harsh environments; choose based on your exposure conditions and maintenance expectations.
Start with:
tighter installation quality (posts + tension + ties),
bottom tension wire or curb/anchor,
smaller mesh / stronger fabric where needed.
Those changes improve delay and reduce easy bypass points without turning the fence into a wall.
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