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Closing double gate at the veg patch

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  • mhrfm
    replied
    Originally posted by Nicos View Post
    Wow!!!....looking fantastic...well done you!
    Thank you. We’re pleased with the way it turned out.

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  • Nicos
    replied
    Wow!!!....looking fantastic...well done you!

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  • mhrfm
    replied
    Thanks for the advice guys. I did sort it out in the end and it looks great.

    Attached Files

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  • Nicos
    replied
    Originally posted by Stan79 View Post
    Has the original poster been back?
    Yup -they've been online this morning.

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  • Stan79
    replied
    Has the original poster been back?

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  • Plot70
    replied
    If google street view does not work then.... Click image for larger version

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ID:	2501358Click image for larger version

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  • nickdub
    replied
    this is a simple example :- https://www.e-hardware.co.uk/156-s-s...SABEgLxdPD_BwE

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  • Nicos
    replied
    ^^^^ I can't get your link to work....

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  • Plot70
    replied
    There are two sets of gates opposite each other on a public road near me.
    They both have the type of latch we are talking about.
    One set is wooden and the other is metal however the latches are both metal.
    Just make a wooden copy of one of them.
    https://www.google.com/maps/@53.2692...7i13312!8i6656

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  • nickdub
    replied
    Sounds like a wooden version of the throw over loop type closer I was trying to describe - no doubt google would turn up some photos and/or diagrams of the type of gate closers.

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  • ESBkevin
    replied
    Make a wooden closer.

    Three planks of wood, the middle is quite narrow and the width of the gate styles plus a smidgeon and attached between the other two along one edge to form an inverted U shape.

    Drill and screw a pivot on one gate at the top so that when the gates come together the contraption hinges down over the top of the nice rounded styles of both gates holding them in a straight line.

    Does that make sense? Hard to describe without pics, and I don't have any pics here to show.

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  • Stan79
    replied
    In the garden I bashed a length of scrap timber into the ground under where the gates meet in the middle until it was flush with the soil surface then fitted a vertical bolt to one gate, dropped the bolt down to the wood, marked it and drilled a hole for the bolt to slot into.

    For the drive way we have a vertical bolt and a “throw over loop” as described above.
    Last edited by Stan79; 15-05-2020, 10:07 PM.

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  • Snoop Puss
    replied
    Take out the existing bolt and use a longer tent peg?

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  • Plot70
    replied
    The hook and eye latch in its simplest form is indeed just a loop of bailer twine.

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  • nickdub
    replied
    The farmers round here seem to favour either a length of rusty chain looped round the moving ends of both gates to link them together, often with an unusable padlock attached presumably to give the impression that the gates are locked, or if the gate is in frequent use a bit binder twine tied to one gate and looped over the other so it can be slipped on and off easily.

    Posh places sometimes have those up and over thingies made from steel which is fixed to one gate's top bar so that it can pivot around a rod through the gate and when closed the open end of the steel closer drops down on top of the other gate to hold it in place. I suppose if you had a little metal working skill and could find a piece of suitable scrap steel you could make one in about an hour. A simple bolt through the closer and gate top bar to act as the pivot with a nut on the end to prevent it slipping out would be the easy bit, and as the closer can be any length it would not matter much how big the gap between gates is.

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