"Best" chain and lock to secure farm gate.
"Best" chain and lock to secure farm gate.
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Discussion

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

As title -19mm seems to be the best available but any actual recommendations for both ?
I've seen some at over £1,000 (!) but are they really 3 x more secure than where a lot of the different options seem to sit ?
Fully appreciate nothing is foolproof but needs to be fitted and as ever its a balance between cost and point.
My previous go to was a Motrak but they went out of business.
TIA.

kambites

71,179 posts

248 months

Would a chain bike lock work? A lot of effort has gone into making the better ones bolt-cutter proof and at least painfully slow for angle grinders. There's a sort of industry standard security test for bike locks called "Sold Secure" which produces different ratings (diamond being the top).

RicksAlfas

14,430 posts

271 months

Burg Wachter bike chain and lock?
Insurance approved for expensive bikes. Various lengths available.

https://www.screwfix.com/p/burg-wachter-hardened-s...

jimothyc

807 posts

111 months

Surely there's not much point investing in something that's harder to cut than the gate itself? As with most security, the best you can do if make it too much bother and hope they move onto the next target.

I think this is why a lot of farmers rely on massive lumps of stone or concrete to stop any unauthorised access to land.

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

kambites said:
Would a chain bike lock work? A lot of effort has gone into making the better ones bolt-cutter proof and at least painfully slow for angle grinders. There's a sort of industry standard security test for bike locks called "Sold Secure" which produces different ratings (diamond being the top).
Yes and tbh I should have mentioned that as that's really what I think is the only real option.
I've seen the gold secure standard mentioned along with chains form the likes of Oxford ,Squire and Yale and even Pragmasis ( never heard of them ) but just wanted to know in the real world any users own experiences.

scot_aln

731 posts

226 months

Farm/field gates can often just be lifted off the hinges so making the centre secure with a lock doesn't help too much?

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

RicksAlfas said:
Burg Wachter bike chain and lock?
Insurance approved for expensive bikes. Various lengths available.

https://www.screwfix.com/p/burg-wachter-hardened-s...
Thanks but "only" 10mm thick chain.

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

jimothyc said:
Surely there's not much point investing in something that's harder to cut than the gate itself? As with most security, the best you can do if make it too much bother and hope they move onto the next target.

I think this is why a lot of farmers rely on massive lumps of stone or concrete to stop any unauthorised access to land.
Agreed except that wouldn't work for us as gate will be in use frequently.

Mammasaid

5,436 posts

124 months

alscar said:
Agreed except that wouldn't work for us as gate will be in use frequently.
If you're only accessing with agricultural vehicles, would a poacher block not work?


E-bmw

12,943 posts

179 months

alscar said:
jimothyc said:
Surely there's not much point investing in something that's harder to cut than the gate itself? As with most security, the best you can do if make it too much bother and hope they move onto the next target.

I think this is why a lot of farmers rely on massive lumps of stone or concrete to stop any unauthorised access to land.
Agreed except that wouldn't work for us as gate will be in use frequently.
You seem to be missing the very valid point.

You can fit a £50 lock or a £1000 lock, both still leave the gate easier to cut through than the lock.

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

E-bmw said:
You seem to be missing the very valid point.

You can fit a £50 lock or a £1000 lock, both still leave the gate easier to cut through than the lock.
Not missing the point at all but equally don't want to rely on that just happening with nothing else as a visual deterrent.
The design of the existing gate and the posts and the siting means they would need to spend considerable time cutting through each bar and the site isn't that isolated that no one would notice.

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

Mammasaid said:
If you're only accessing with agricultural vehicles, would a poacher block not work?

Unfortunately not.

Snow and Rocks

3,337 posts

54 months

Having cut up a mangled galvanised farm gate a few years back, a cordless grinder goes through the bars in seconds.

Heavy duty looking motorbike chain and a decent padlock for the visual deterrent is as far as I would go. If someone really wants in they easily will so no point spending a fortune.

Promised Land

5,365 posts

236 months

As with hinges on vans, your local tea leaf will just angle grind the hinge knuckles off, gates fall flat on floor.

Think of scum stealing or accessing areas, they’re like water, ie will always find the easiest route if they want to get in.

An expensive lock/chain like the extra bolts on van doors only high lights the area more as something could be worth having.

LooneyTunes

9,247 posts

185 months

alscar said:
RicksAlfas said:
Burg Wachter bike chain and lock?
Insurance approved for expensive bikes. Various lengths available.

https://www.screwfix.com/p/burg-wachter-hardened-s...
Thanks but "only" 10mm thick chain.
FWIW, that chain (bought from Amazon), is what we use around the place.

Two/three chains per pair of gates: one round the hinge post and through the gate (new gates have been stolen around here!), one to hold the gate(s) closed.

It won't stop a cordless angle grinder but not much will. Likewise not much will resist the largest bolt cutters if someone is determined. Have a few blocks of "concrete Lego" behind gates we don't often use but would be attractive for anyone wanting to create an impromptu caravan site.

Chunkier gates/CCTV worth considering, but obviously not viable for every field entrance. We're planning something like this: https://www.estateguard.co.uk/electric-farm-gates (they do a five bar that is very substantial)


biggiles

2,118 posts

252 months

We had chains on farm gates - realistically, a £10 chain will be as good as a £100 chain, an angle grinder can get through them all if someone really wants to get in. Tip: use a tech screw to fix the chain (at the midway point) to the post, so you don't lose the chain. Don't ask how I learned that...

Better upgrade was to get a local agri welder to make the existing gate bolts padlock-able (or add such bolts if needed). Ended up being under £100/gate, and much better for security. They can also weld a little something on the gate post so it can't be easily lifted off.

If you need more resilience to angle grinders, you'll need to move up a gate class I think. Electric cantilever sliding gate?

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

Snow and Rocks said:
Having cut up a mangled galvanised farm gate a few years back, a cordless grinder goes through the bars in seconds.

Heavy duty looking motorbike chain and a decent padlock for the visual deterrent is as far as I would go. If someone really wants in they easily will so no point spending a fortune.
Yup I get that.

alscar

Original Poster:

8,966 posts

240 months

Thanks LT and Giles some good advice there too.

Turn7

25,523 posts

248 months

alscar said:
jimothyc said:
Surely there's not much point investing in something that's harder to cut than the gate itself? As with most security, the best you can do if make it too much bother and hope they move onto the next target.

I think this is why a lot of farmers rely on massive lumps of stone or concrete to stop any unauthorised access to land.
Agreed except that wouldn't work for us as gate will be in use frequently.
https://poacherblock.co.uk/

The jiffle king

7,455 posts

285 months

Assume that your gate hinges the things you hang it on are reversed so that you cannot just lift the gate on and off? We had no idea when we first moved in and then an agri person showed us how to do that

As for a lock, as people say it’s a matter of time before someone courts through the aluminium so we just make it as awkward as possible by fitting a couple of locks and chains and having the hinges on the bottom upside down