Quarter inch steel, has lock and weighs 136 pounds.
Might be easier to move!It will even keep out the kids. Now I have to send it back to have the address changed.
Reddog what is that bike gathering dust in the background????
When I moved to my old place in 1980 there were 9 mailboxes serving 2 private roads in a line. After they were vandalized and then run down I put 2 big telephone poles in and and mounted treated 4x4's to mount the boxes on. Mine was the first in line so it got hit with the ball bats and they just bounced off. Had one person spin on the bend and hit the one pole but never even moved it. I had dug the holes with a backhoe and they were 5 foot in the ground.
No time to research it, but I heard they should be able to shear off if hit by a vehicle. My 6x6 post is 3' down in 240# of concrete mix. My late MIL hit it many years ago backing out of the drive, and it stopped her Buick LeSabre from going into the street.What's the rule these days when your mailbox setup is so stout that when something hits it (be it a car or snowplow) that your mailbox holds up but destroys whatever hit it?
Since most mailboxes are in the right-of-way of the road, I didn't think they were allowed to be so stout.
What's the rule these days when your mailbox setup is so stout that when something hits it (be it a car or snowplow) that your mailbox holds up but destroys whatever hit it?
Since most mailboxes are in the right-of-way of the road, I didn't think they were allowed to be so stout.