
A hardware store had plastic stakes for tomato fencing and such. 2.50 each, but the clips did not match the fence I bought. I made this clip to work with a furring strip. They are cheap and I had the spikes from a tree house project for the kids. I used a few zip ties to hold the fence what I wanted. Tomatoes are now growing up... not out. =)There is a skinny stake and a stake. The skinny took the walls down to 3mm. The thick is 5mm and takes an hour to print. I think I chose 5 percent infill. I create two spike holes, but also used 1 spike. Make sure you put the spikes in first... I am not sure it is possible to pull the wood stake out afterwards. At the garden I think I heard one of the step areas bust, but the stake pushed in fine by hand the and fence looked pretty nice. The area is sandy, so I am not sure if the spikes are really long enough... I had a bunch of them though, so why not try. The reinforcement piece only fits the 5mm adapter. I just had a brainstorm of printing it the adapter in two pieces so the supports would be under the initial adapter. That is what they looked like from the store.
- 0 inches x 0 inches x 0 inches
- this product is 3D printed
- 16 available colors
- material is a strong plastic
- free delivery by May 05
- 0 parts
