Mesh, wire, height, post route, finish, and gate or topping scope are surfaced at the top so buyers can start with usable details.
358 security fence manufacturer for airport, prison, utility, and industrial perimeter projects.
Built for importers, contractors, distributors, and project buyers who need more than loose anti-climb panels. Use this page to scope the 358 panel together with posts, clamps, gates, topping options, finish route, packing, and export support, then move faster to a clearer factory quote with fewer missing items at RFQ stage.
- Made for anti-climb perimeter projects that need panel + post + clamp coordination, not only a panel price
- Supports standard anti-climb supply, anti-cut enhanced direction, gate matching, and topping-ready configurations
- Factory-oriented help for finish choice, pallet packing, loading plans, and export document support before shipment
Standard 358 mesh panel — narrow 76.2 × 12.7 mm opening, 4.0 mm wire, hot-dip galvanized finish. Replace with factory production photo when available.
358 pages work better when they explain security logic, system matching, and export delivery together.
Stronger 358 pages explain security logic, system matching, and export delivery together. This version adds spec-first routing, project-type guidance, gate and topping matching, and export-assurance explanation before the final quote form.
Standard anti-climb, anti-cut enhanced, topping-ready, and gate-matched system options are separated to reduce vague inquiries.
Buyers can route the conversation by prison, airport, industrial, utility, or distributor repeat-order scenarios instead of one generic paragraph.
The page now encourages one complete message covering panels, posts, fixings, gates, toppings, and export packing in the same inquiry.
Explain the model in plain language before the technical detail gets heavy.
Many buyers know they need stronger anti-climb perimeter control, but not all of them are security specialists. A good 358 page should quickly explain the product logic, then move into configuration and RFQ guidance.
3 x 0.5 style mesh logic
358 commonly refers to a narrow mesh opening around 76.2 x 12.7 mm, which helps limit footholds and handholds compared with standard mesh panels.
8-gauge-class naming logic
The name also points to a heavier wire category, but the final wire diameter still needs to match the project risk level and required rigidity.
Visibility plus perimeter control
358 security fence is often chosen when the site needs anti-climb performance without losing sight lines for patrol, CCTV, and daily facility monitoring.
System product, not only a panel
Buyers usually need a full package discussion covering posts, clamps, gates, toppings, and finish route, not just the welded mesh panel alone.
- Mesh opening — standard 358 route or custom anti-climb requirement
- Wire diameter — matched to security level and panel height
- Panel dimensions — height, width, quantity, and total perimeter run
- Post logic — buried, base-plated, retrofit, or topping-ready arrangement
- Finish route — galvanized, powder-coated, or duplex corrosion protection
- System scope — gates, toppings, fasteners, accessories, and packing request
If your project needs a broader mesh option before stepping into high-security routes, compare it with the welded mesh fence page for lower-risk perimeter supply.
Narrow mesh opening limits foothold and handhold. Replace with factory photo showing actual 358 mesh panel, 4.0 mm wire, and weld consistency.
P0 asset needed: factory mesh close-up with ruler/scale for wire diameter referenceClarify mesh, wire, and security-proof expectations before the RFQ reaches pricing.
Buyers who arrive on 358 pages are often comparing security performance, not only price. If the project requires delay-rating proof such as ASTM F2781-15 or LPS 1175 alignment, it needs to be stated early so the panel build, post selection, and third-party testing route match the job requirement.
Mesh opening & anti-climb logic
358 mesh openings are selected to limit footholds while keeping visibility for patrol, CCTV, and perimeter monitoring.
Wire diameter & panel rigidity
Wire diameter is matched to the risk level and panel height. Common ranges run from 4.0–6.0 mm, with heavier options available for higher-security projects.
Post size & fixing method
Post section, wall thickness, and fixing method should be coordinated with the panel height, topping load, and site installation conditions.
Security testing or delay-rating needs
If your project requests security testing, confirm the target standard and testing method before quoting so the RFQ includes the right build and inspection path.
- Mesh opening — standard 358 or custom anti-climb requirement
- Wire diameter — matched to risk level and panel height
- Panel height & post size — coordinated with topping and gate loads
- Fixing method — buried, base-plated, retrofit, or anti-cut fasteners
- Coating & corrosion plan — galvanized, powder-coated, or duplex route
- Testing requirements — delay-rating or third-party inspection if specified
Send this checklist with your RFQ to receive a faster panel + post recommendation.
Let buyers route the quote by risk level, not only by the word “358”
Stronger 358 pages separate the first buying decision into familiar security routes. That makes anti-climb, anti-cut, and topping requirements easier to scope before the final quotation.
Standard anti-climb route
Best for warehouses, factories, logistics yards, and controlled industrial perimeters that need narrow mesh, good visibility, and export-ready repeat supply.
- Core 358 panel + posts + clamps
- Balanced between security and procurement speed
Anti-cut enhanced route
Useful when the site wants stronger deterrence language, heavier-duty wire discussion, and more attention to weld quality, rigidity, and intrusion delay framing.
- Good fit for higher-risk industrial or utility sites
- Supports a more trust-heavy engineering conversation
Topping-ready route
Designed for perimeters that may need V-arms, barbed wire, razor wire, or other upper deterrence measures integrated from the start.
- Useful for prison, restricted areas, and critical infrastructure
- Helps align post design with topping load and fixing logic
Gate-matched route
Best when the buyer needs panels to work together with pedestrian gates, vehicle gates, or access-control openings in the same project package.
- Improves full-system RFQ accuracy
- Supports higher order value than loose panel quoting
Route the page around the environments that actually buy 358 security fence.
Application-led guidance helps overseas buyers decide faster because they usually think in terms of site risk, access control, and operating environment before they think in terms of wire or coating alone.
Prison & detention perimeter
Strong fit when anti-climb, topping compatibility, controlled sight lines, and higher deterrence framing are essential to the project brief.
Airport & transport perimeter
Useful for long perimeter runs that need visibility for patrol and CCTV, reliable system coordination, and a more disciplined spec package.
Factory, warehouse & logistics compounds
Suitable when buyers want a stronger industrial perimeter than standard mesh while still keeping installation, maintenance, and export packing practical.
Utility & infrastructure sites
Good for substations, data centers, energy sites, and restricted operational areas where perimeter control matters more than decorative appearance.
| Project route | Usually cared about first | Matching system scope | Best next move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prison / restricted high-risk perimeter | Topping, anti-cut language, stronger deterrence, secure fixing | 358 panels, reinforced posts, V-arms, razor or barbed wire, matching gate | Send a high-risk perimeter RFQ |
| Airport / transport site | Visibility, longer runs, installation method, corrosion route | Panels, posts, secure clamps, gates, finish, packing plan | Review post and installation logic |
| Factory / warehouse perimeter | Security upgrade, delivery speed, repeat-order consistency | Standard anti-climb system with optional gate matching | Choose a security route |
| Utility / infrastructure project | Climate fit, corrosion protection, access control, project drawings | Panels, posts, fixings, gates, topping-ready options, export QC | Use project RFQ support |
358 panels on airport runway perimeter: visibility for patrol, CCTV compatibility, anti-climb protection for restricted cargo and terminal zones.
P1 asset needed: airport 358 perimeter installation photo from factory portfolio or site referenceLong-run 358 perimeter at factory and logistics sites: rigid panel, anti-climb mesh, and galvanizing for outdoor corrosion resistance.
P1 asset needed: industrial 358 perimeter factory installation with visible panel height and post alignment358 with V-arm and razor wire topping for high-risk restricted sites requiring maximum delay-rating and intrusion detection.
P2 asset needed: prison/corrections 358 with topping installed — can use reference installation photoTranslate 358 specs into Saudi and Gulf security language before the RFQ gets too generic.
Recent Saudi market research shows buyers often search by project language first: high security fence, anti-climb fence, perimeter security, HCIS-style, airport, utility, and oil-and-gas protection. This block helps the 358 page absorb that intent without making false compliance claims.
HCIS-style industrial route
Useful when the inquiry comes from Riyadh, Dammam, Jubail, or Khobar and starts with industrial security wording instead of only the 358 model name.
- Lead with drawing, BOQ, consultant note, or required standard
- Keep wording at project-support level unless the real approval spec says more
Airport, port & border route
Best for long perimeter runs where visibility, anti-climb delay, topping readiness, and disciplined post logic matter from the first quotation.
- Useful for Saudi, GCC, and other transport-security procurement routes
- Bundle panels, posts, toppings, and gates in the same inquiry
Utility, substation & water route
Strong fit when the buyer needs corrosion planning, restricted-access framing, and anti-climb mesh aligned to substations, plants, and infrastructure compounds.
- Clarify inland desert vs coastal exposure early
- Confirm whether gates, toppings, and anti-tamper fixings are part of the scope
Critical warehouse & data route
Useful when the site needs stronger perimeter control than standard welded mesh but still wants patrol visibility, CCTV sight lines, and export-friendly system quoting.
- Good for logistics yards, restricted warehouses, and data-support sites
- Use anti-climb + gate-matched wording instead of generic panel-only copy
If the buyer starts with "high security fence Saudi Arabia", "anti climb fence Saudi Arabia", or city-led procurement wording such as Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam, Jubail, or Khobar, route them into the Saudi market page first and then bring them back to this 358 page for system depth.
- Best country-page triggers: city, port, project approval path, importer vs EPC buyer, or destination-climate questions
- Best product-page triggers: mesh opening, wire diameter, post route, topping load, gate count, and anti-climb level
- Safe wording rule: support HCIS-style or consultant-led workflows without inventing project approvals or certifications
- Best handoff: keep drawings, BOQ files, and required standards in the same RFQ so the Saudi route and 358 route stay aligned
Use document clarity and climate-fit proof to keep Saudi 358 inquiries from falling back to price-only comparison.
Saudi and Gulf buyers often move faster when the first reply confirms what files can be checked, how inland vs coastal finish logic will be handled, and whether the 358 system quote can stay tied to the same project package.
Document-first quotation path
Ask for BOQ, consultant note, drawing markups, gate count, topping scope, and any approval wording in the first message so the quote stays project-led.
- Best for HCIS-style, airport, utility, and industrial perimeter inquiries
- Reduces the risk of pricing a loose panel when the real need is a full perimeter package
Coastal vs inland finish proof
Saudi jobs often need a different corrosion conversation depending on whether the site is inland desert, Red Sea exposure, Gulf coast exposure, or mixed logistics routing.
- Clarify galvanizing, powder coating, or duplex route before sampling or production
- Keep the finish note tied to the destination city, port, or operating environment
System scope proof before PO
Serious buyers want confirmation that panels, posts, clamps, gates, toppings, and hardware will be quoted as one coordinated 358 system instead of separate guesses.
- Useful for warehouse compounds, utilities, airports, and restricted-access infrastructure
- Helps the buyer compare complete scope, not just panel unit price
City or port + project type + panel height + quantity or run length + post route + gate or topping scope + finish note + BOQ or drawing files.
Make the system fit clear before the site receives the container.
Stronger 358 pages do not stop at the mesh panel. They explain how the panel will stand, connect, open, and perform once it reaches the project site.
Buried or base-plated posts
Choose the post route according to soil condition, concrete base, retrofit requirement, and whether the site wants more permanent or staged installation logic.
Security clamps & fixings
Fasteners should match the site risk level and maintenance expectation instead of being left as a generic add-on after the panel quote.
Matching gates & toppings
358 panel projects often need pedestrian gates, vehicle gates, V-arms, barbed wire, or razor-wire compatibility clarified early in the buying process.
Retrofit and mixed-system situations
Some buyers need 358 panels to work with existing posts, site foundations, or adjacent perimeter systems. That should be stated before production is fixed.
- Pedestrian gate — for controlled access points in prison, industrial, and utility layouts
- Vehicle gate — for logistics and maintenance movement inside larger perimeter systems
- V-arms — when the project needs topping-ready geometry and stronger deterrence framing
- Barbed or razor wire support — for higher-risk environments that need added upper-line security
- Post, clamp, and bracket coordination — to keep the whole perimeter system consistent at installation stage
358 panel fixed to square/Recta post with security clamp — anti-tamper fasteners, correct post spacing, and panel alignment verified on-site.
P2 asset needed: post + clamp close-up showing panel-to-post fixing detail with anti-tamper boltQuote the panel as a full perimeter system before the RFQ reaches pricing.
The fastest 358 quotes show the full package — panel spec, post and fixing route, gate and topping match, plus accessories, packing, and lead-time expectations — so the factory can scope everything in one reply.
Panel family & sizes
Confirm mesh opening, wire diameter, panel height/width, and the anti-cut or higher-rigidity route before quantity is locked.
- Standard anti-climb or custom opening
- Heavier wire options for higher-risk routes
Posts, fixings & foundations
Align post profile, base-plated vs buried install, clamp type, and anchor-bolt logic with the site conditions.
- Match post spacing to panel width
- Confirm soil or concrete base notes
Gates, toppings & access
Route pedestrian or vehicle gates, V-arms, razor or barbed wire, and access-control compatibility together.
- Gate width, hardware, and opening count
- Topping load and fixing method
Accessories, packing & lead time
Clarify clamps, caps, bands, brackets, export packing plan, pallet labels, and document support in the same scope.
- Sample, test report, or factory proof
- Target delivery window
Send the system scope above and receive a panel + post + gate + topping recommendation with packing guidance.
Use QC, packing, and drawing support as trust builders before the inquiry ends.
Engineering language alone is not enough for export conversion. Overseas buyers also want to know what happens after the quote, how the goods are checked, and what they will receive in one shipment.
Drawing & scope confirmation
We align panel size, wire route, post logic, gate openings, topping need, and destination-side installation notes before production planning is locked.
Panel, post & fixing coordination
358 panels, posts, clamps, brackets, gates, and accessories are reviewed as one system so the RFQ does not leave out critical matching parts.
Surface finish & QC review
Galvanizing, powder coating, color choice, weld consistency, and appearance checks are clarified around the climate and service-life expectations of the project.
Packing & loading handoff
Panels, posts, gates, toppings, and accessories can be packed and labeled with destination-side counting, unloading, and mixed-container clarity in mind.
358 panels stacked on export pallet with interleaving cardboard, metal strapping, and pallet label. Posts, clamps, and gate kits packed separately in same container for complete system delivery.
P2 asset needed: factory 358 panel pallet — stacked, strapped, with visible label and corner protectionPanels loaded into 20GP or 40HC container with posts and accessories bundled separately. Loading plan shared before dispatch so buyers can verify count on arrival.
P2 asset needed: 358 panels loaded in container with visible strapping and packing list envelope on panel faceProject type + risk level + panel size + quantity or run length + post route + finish + gate or topping scope + destination country + target timing.
Questions buyers usually ask before ordering 358 security fence systems.
What is the difference between 358 security fence and standard welded mesh fence?
358 security fence is typically positioned for higher-risk perimeter use because of its narrower mesh opening, heavier-duty security framing, and stronger anti-climb positioning. Standard welded mesh pages are usually better suited to broader perimeter or lower-risk commercial routes.
Why do many buyers search for both “358 fence” and “anti-climb fence”?
“358 fence” is the model-led term, while “anti-climb fence” is the problem-led term. Serious B2B pages should bridge both search habits because buyers often know the security outcome before they know the exact model naming.
Can you supply posts, clamps, gates, and toppings together with the panels?
Yes. This page is intentionally written around system supply, so the quotation can include posts, clamps, brackets, pedestrian or vehicle gates, V-arms, barbed wire, razor wire support, and packing expectations together.
Is 358 fence suitable for prisons, airports, factories, and utility sites?
Yes. Those are some of the most common project directions, although the exact wire route, post logic, gate arrangement, finish, and topping scope should follow the risk level and operating environment of the site.
What finish options can be discussed for export projects?
Buyers can usually discuss galvanized, powder-coated, or duplex finish routes depending on corrosion exposure, appearance requirement, and expected service life.
What should I send to get a more accurate 358 fence quote?
Send the project type, perimeter risk level, target panel height, quantity or total run length, post route, gate and topping requirement, finish preference, destination country, and any layout notes, drawings, or reference photos you already have.
The dedicated 358 Security Fence FAQ page covers 9 detailed buyer questions including security level comparison, delay-rating standards, finish comparison, system component checklist, export logistics, and a full perimeter RFQ form.
Use one clear anti-climb inquiry path with direct contact routes, project context, and export-ready scope.
The latest competitor scan showed that stronger 358 landing pages do not stop at a generic form. They surface direct contact, high-security applications, and a tighter RFQ checklist so airport, prison, power plant, and industrial buyers can move faster.
Use email for formal RFQs or WhatsApp for faster back-and-forth when you need a panel + post + gate recommendation.
- Email: contact@hulan.buma55.com
- WhatsApp: +86 150 3507 9448
- Best first line: 358 security fence + project type + quantity + target finish + destination
This page now mirrors the trust and inquiry patterns used on active anti-climb competitor pages.
- Anti-climb + clear-view positioning for high-security jobs
- Factory-direct supply with panel, post, clamp, gate, and topping coordination
- Export support for drawing review, pallet packing, and loading planning
358 security fence + airport / prison / utility / industrial project type + panel height + quantity or run length + post route + gate or topping scope + finish + destination country + delivery timing.
Use this route for prison perimeters, airport boundaries, power plants, substations, warehouses, logistics parks, government compounds, and other infrastructure projects where anti-climb plus visibility both matter.
Need a broader lower-risk mesh comparison? Review welded mesh fence. Need the topping layer too? Review razor wire & concertina wire. Need mixed-category RFQ help? Use the contact page.