:grin:...Well...You can not really get..."more perfect"...than
1/4 minus gravel for a "go to" generic...never fail method...(in virtually all applications) for not only installing posts in general, but this is the "finish off" material for many current post related domestic architecture as well. I have seen it spec'd so many times on blue prints that its become common knowledge among...
good builders...when facilitating any type of post work in general. There other systems that work too, and do drain better, however for most "landscape post" applications, its hard to go wrong with
1/4 minus gravel...
Excellent!!!
:|...Well, it's impossible to really effectively discuss someone's "I think" comments.
What I can state again (and document further) is this is...
bad practice...and not something a good builder today would ever recommend to a client or student trying to mount posts. Does such practices still go on...???...of course!!! There are countless "bad practices" that plague the building arts...
Before the "1990's" the toxicity level in wood was also much higher, to the point of actually causing death and illness in children and workers that used or played on such materials. The number of winning class action lawsuits around the...very real...issue are many.
Well then...those post could be any species of wood for the most part...
The "decay line" would be very specific as wood...under water...does not rot ever. That's why we find logs from a few hundred years all the way to over 15,000 years old buried in wet mineral soils and/or under water that are actually in better condition than if just harvested and air dried...
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To validate further, primary for those readers trying to figure this all out and make informed decisions, I share the following:
Will wooden posts rot in concrete?
How do you keep posts from rotting?
Why deck posts should not be set in concrete?
The comment above by John about...
"posts breaking off"...I haven't even begun to address yet in this conversation. I felt it was out of context...However, "moment shear" is a serious issue for wood post when encapsulated in concrete and subjected to either tectonic and/or wind event shear events...
Can you put deck posts in concrete?
Note:
Even the Building departments in most "Big Box Stores" officially never recommend embedment in concrete!!! Using it as a "footer" is a lesser form of placing a stone at the bottom which has been common practice for thousands of years and still is in many cultures.
We do not use OPC (ordinary portland cements) of any kind in our architectural designs for any project unless there is mitigating conditions like failure in soils load capcity...but rather the
tradtional stone systems for mounting house, deck and related foundation systems...Why?...Well, for one the oldest wooden buildings in the world are built this way (7000 years undocumented and 2000 years documented) because concrete (especially modern concretes) are plagued with all types of issues, are not environmentally sustainable, are costly, and act like sponges capturing and holding moisture there by ROTTING!!! the wood the come in contact with...