8 Common Questions About Welded Wire Fence Panels, Steel Grating & Security Mesh – Expert Guide
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Quick Answers to Your Toughest Fencing Questions
- 1. What's the real difference between welded wire fence panels and field fence?
- 2. Is anti-climb chain link fence actually climb-proof?
- 3. When should I choose steel grating platform instead of solid flooring?
- 4. What mesh size is best for security mesh fence?
- 5. Is hexagonal wire netting (chicken wire) good for anything besides poultry?
- 6. What's the right spacing for sheep netting fence?
- 7. Can one type of fence work for both security and animal containment?
- 8. Is the most expensive option always the most secure?
Quick Answers to Your Toughest Fencing Questions
I'm a quality compliance manager at a fencing supplies company. I review every batch of steel grating, welded panels, and security mesh before it ships—roughly 200 unique product lines each year. In Q1 2024 alone, I rejected 18% of first deliveries due to weld consistency issues or gauge variation. Below are the questions I hear most from buyers, along with the honest answers I wish someone had given me when I started.
1. What's the real difference between welded wire fence panels and field fence?
Welded wire fence panels are rigid, pre-assembled sections—typically 5' × 16' with 2×4 or 4×4 inch mesh openings. Field fence (woven) is flexible, comes in rolls, and usually has a less uniform mesh pattern. The practical difference? Panels resist pressure better for perimeter security and livestock containment. Field fence is cheaper but sags over time. I've seen a 6-foot welded panel hold up against a vehicle impact (25mph) where woven fence would have folded. That said, if your terrain is steep or irregular, welded panels may require post-setting adjustments that add labor.
2. Is anti-climb chain link fence actually climb-proof?
Not entirely—but it's a significant deterrent. Standard chain link has 2-inch diamond openings that offer easy footholds. Anti-climb varieties use ½-inch or 1-inch mesh, or add a barbed wire top strut. In a 2022 blind test we ran with our security team, an average person scaled standard chain link in 8 seconds. With 1-inch mesh footings, it took 28 seconds—and they gave up before reaching the top. For critical perimeters, I pair anti-climb mesh with a steel grating platform skirt at the base. That stops ground-level leverage entirely. Honestly, I'm not sure why more facilities don't add that base—cost isn't prohibitive.
3. When should I choose steel grating platform instead of solid flooring?
Steel grating is ideal where drainage, ventilation, or slip resistance matter—think catwalks, drainage covers, or platform steps in wet environments. Solid flooring is better where debris containment or wheeled traffic is a concern. We supply municipal water treatment plants that spec 1¼-inch bearing bar spacing with serrated surfaces. For those projects, solid plate would trap sludge and become a slipping hazard. Downside: grating can deform under concentrated loads. We once got a rework request for a platform that buckled under a 4-ton pallet jack—the spec had called for a 25 psi load rating, but actual floor pressure was higher. Now every contract includes a load calculation form. Period.
Related standard: Steel grating load tables per ANSI/NAAMM MBG 531. Verify with your supplier's engineering data.
4. What mesh size is best for security mesh fence?
It depends on the threat model. For general perimeter security, 2-inch × 1-inch rectangular mesh with 8-gauge wire is a good baseline—it resists cutting attempts and won't allow footholds. For higher security (prisons, data centers), go with 1-inch × ½-inch mesh in 6-gauge. I rejected a batch last year where the wire diameter averaged 0.162 inches instead of the spec'd 0.177 inches—that 8% reduction means roughly 15% lower tensile strength. The vendor argued it was within industry tolerance. It wasn't. We sent it back.
5. Is hexagonal wire netting (chicken wire) good for anything besides poultry?
Actually yes—within limits. Hexagonal wire netting works for light garden trellises, compost bin enclosure, and temporary erosion control on slopes. The hexagonal pattern distributes tension better than square mesh when staked to the ground. But for animal containment beyond chickens or rabbits? No. I've seen customers try to use it as a dog kennel fence—coyotes and even determined beagles will breach it. Save yourself the headache: use welded wire panels or security mesh for anything that needs to stay inside or out.
Price reference: Hexagonal wire netting runs roughly $0.15–$0.45 per square foot as of early 2025. Verify current pricing.
6. What's the right spacing for sheep netting fence?
Standard sheep netting uses 6-inch horizontal spacing with vertical wires spaced 6 to 12 inches apart. The key spec is the bottom tension wire and the top wire height—usually 32–48 inches total. For horned breeds, I recommend going wider on bottom spacing (so they don't catch their horns) and adding a smooth top wire. We had a batch where the horizontal wires were spaced unevenly—ranged from 5 to 7 inches—and it caused lambs to get their heads stuck. We rejected it and ordered from a supplier who could hold ±0.25 inch. Cost difference? Minimal. Peace of mind? Priceless.
7. Can one type of fence work for both security and animal containment?
Rarely—not without trade-offs. Welded wire panels with 2×4 mesh can serve both, but the mesh size is too large for small animals (lambs, kids) and too small for high-security perimeters (can't see through easily for surveillance). I usually advise a hybrid approach: security mesh fence on perimeter, with a separate containment run of welded panels or field fence inside. The cost increase per linear foot is roughly $4–8 for the double layer, versus $12–20 for a single solution that doesn't do either well.
Question you didn't ask but should: Does your fence's warranty cover corrosion in coastal environments? Most standard galvanized coatings are rated for inland use. In a 2023 audit of 40 installations within 5 miles of saltwater, 62% showed surface rust within 18 months. Spec . hot-dip galvanized (ASTM A123) or powder-coated over galvanized for those jobs.
8. Is the most expensive option always the most secure?
No—and that's not just me avoiding a hard sell. Security mesh fence with 6-gauge wire is stronger, yes. But if your threat model is kids climbing over a garden wall, a 4-foot welded panel with anti-climb extensions will stop them just as effectively at half the cost. The choice is about matching the solution to the actual risk, not buying the heaviest catalog listing. I've made that mistake myself: specified ⅜-inch grating for a maintenance platform where ¾-inch would have worked fine. Overengineered by $2,300. Lesson learned.
This advice was accurate as of early 2025. Steel pricing fluctuates with raw material costs, so verify current rates before budgeting.