Higher rigidity for stronger public, industrial, and project-led perimeter lines.
868 double wire mesh fence panels for school, sports, warehouse, and industrial perimeter projects.
868 double wire mesh fence is a rigid welded panel system built for projects that need stronger panel stiffness, a cleaner flat-panel appearance, and longer outdoor service life than lighter standard welded mesh. This page helps buyers compare 8/6/8 and 6/5/6 twin wire options, panel sizes, finish routes, post systems, clips, gates, and export-ready RFQ details in one place.
- Main commercial terms covered together: 868 double wire fence, 656 double wire fence, twin wire mesh fence, and 2D panel fence
- Best-fit for schools, sports grounds, warehouses, industrial parks, municipal boundaries, and medium-security projects
- Supports panels, posts, clips, tamper-resistant fixings, gates, and export packing in one RFQ path
Lighter twin wire option when the buyer wants the same flat-panel look at a lower cost tier.
The most common base spec buyers ask for before the post and clip system is finalized.
Frequent color requests for schools, sports grounds, municipal works, and modern industrial compounds.
Explain the structure clearly before the buyer compares price only.
868 double wire mesh fence uses one vertical wire combined with two horizontal wires on each side to create a stronger, flatter welded panel than standard single-wire welded mesh. In export projects, buyers often use the names twin wire mesh fence, double wire fence panels, or 2D panel fence for the same product family.
868 means a heavier-duty structure
The common 8/6/8 configuration uses two 8 mm horizontal wires and one 6 mm vertical wire for stronger panel stiffness and a more security-oriented feel.
656 is the lighter twin wire version
6/5/6 panels keep the same flat twin-wire appearance and application logic, but at a lower material weight and a more economical project entry point.
Flat-panel look matters commercially
Compared with 3D V-bend panels, twin wire fence presents a flatter, heavier-duty appearance that fits schools, sports grounds, public projects, and industrial boundaries well.
- 868: better rigidity, stronger anti-impact feel, better fit for industrial, warehouse, and higher-security public projects
- 656: same twin wire family with lower weight and lower cost, useful for school and sports projects with tighter budgets
- Shared core: flat panel appearance, 50 × 200 mm mesh logic, post + clip installation system, and galvanized / powder-coated finish routes
- Common aliases: twin wire mesh fence, double wire mesh fence, 2D panel fence, rigid mesh fence
- Upgrade path: for tighter anti-climb requirements, compare with 358 security fence
Why buyers choose twin wire mesh fence instead of standard welded mesh.
The strongest commercial angle is not only the panel structure. Buyers want to know how twin wire helps the finished perimeter look, perform, and stay easier to approve for schools, municipal works, industrial compounds, and public facilities.
Higher rigidity than standard welded mesh panels
The double horizontal wire structure makes the panel feel stronger and more stable in long perimeter runs or busier public-facing zones.
Clean flat-panel appearance
Useful when the project wants a neat, modern perimeter instead of a V-bend look, especially for schools, sports grounds, and public buildings.
Good balance between openness and security
The system keeps strong visibility for monitoring while still presenting a heavier-duty deterrent than lighter wire-mesh categories.
Flexible finish routes
Galvanized and powder-coated options let buyers match corrosion resistance and color requirements to market, climate, and project expectations.
System supply works better than panel-only quotes
Panels convert faster when posts, clips, tamper-resistant bolts, gates, and packing logic stay inside the same RFQ thread.
Fits multiple application types
One product family can cover school perimeters, sports enclosures, warehouses, industrial parks, utilities, municipal boundaries, and selected infrastructure jobs.
Use this table to turn a product interest into a quote-ready 868 / 656 RFQ.
Buyers who confirm these technical points early usually get a faster and cleaner quotation because the panel, post, and fixing system stay aligned from the start.
| Specification item | Typical export scope | What buyers should confirm | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wire diameter | 868 (8/6/8 mm) or 656 (6/5/6 mm) | Required rigidity, budget target, and site risk level | Decides the panel strength and price tier immediately |
| Mesh opening | 50 × 200 mm is the most common route | Visual openness, safety feel, and local project norms | Changes appearance, stiffness perception, and commercial fit |
| Panel width | 2500 mm or 3000 mm common widths | Site layout, freight plan, and installation preference | Affects panel count, post count, and loading efficiency |
| Common heights | 1030 / 1230 / 1530 / 1730 / 2030 / 2430 mm | Security level, local use case, and gate height match | Changes material weight, post route, and visual control level |
| Surface treatment | Pre-galvanized + powder coated, hot-dip galvanized, or project-matched finish | Climate, project life cycle, and color requirement | Directly affects corrosion resistance, lead time, and appearance |
| Posts & fixings | Square, rectangular, or peach posts with clips and tamper-resistant bolts | Post type, buried or base-plate install, and security hardware level | Turns the offer into an installable system instead of a loose-panel quote |
Do not quote twin wire panels without confirming the post family first.
The latest competitor scan showed that post selection is one of the highest-value decision points on serious 868 pages, yet many suppliers still hide it in a PDF or leave it for late-stage email exchanges. This section brings the post system, fixing logic, and project fit into the page so buyers can move from panel interest to a real RFQ faster.
Square and rectangular steel posts
The most common export route for schools, warehouses, factories, and municipal boundaries because the fixing logic is familiar and the supply chain is stable.
- Good fit for clamp bars, spider clips, and tamper-resistant bolts
- Works well for buried or base-plate installation depending on site conditions
- Strong default choice when the buyer wants the lowest installation risk
Peach posts for cleaner commercial presentation
Peach-shaped posts are often chosen when appearance matters as much as rigidity, especially on school, campus, sports, and public-facing projects.
- Common in projects that want a cleaner, more architectural perimeter line
- Useful when buyers prefer concealed-looking fixing routes over heavy hardware visuals
- Frequently paired with powder-coated twin wire systems in RAL project colors
I-shaped posts for engineered project routes
I-post systems suit buyers who want a more project-led structural look, especially when the order is driven by drawings, BOQs, or public-sector specifications.
- Useful for long perimeter runs where repeatability matters
- Often discussed together with anti-theft fixing details and gate matching
- Best confirmed early so the panel, clip, and post route stay aligned in one quote
Arc-shaped aluminum posts for premium or coastal jobs
Less common than steel posts, but worth surfacing for projects that prioritize corrosion resistance, lighter structure, or a more premium finish route.
- Useful for coastal, humid, or design-sensitive environments
- Helps buyers understand that twin wire systems can move beyond one default steel post route
- Typically needs earlier drawing confirmation than standard square-post systems
Send the layout together with target height, quantity, and destination market. We can match the right post family, clip route, and installation logic before final pricing.
Guide buyers by where the twin wire fence will be used.
Twin wire fence is not only a product keyword. It is often approved by project use first, then by wire route and finish. These use cases help buyers self-identify faster.
Schools and campuses
Popular for school boundaries because it looks cleaner than many security products while still offering a stronger, more durable perimeter than lighter mesh options.
Sports grounds and stadium edges
Works well where the project wants a rigid flat panel that can handle public-facing use and maintain a neat line around courts and sports areas.
Warehouses and logistics centers
A strong middle route for sites that want a more solid industrial perimeter without immediately moving into 358 anti-climb mesh specifications.
Factories and industrial parks
Good for project buyers who want rigid mesh panels, matching posts, gates, and anti-corrosion finish for long-run boundary systems.
Parks, municipal, and public buildings
Useful where the appearance should stay orderly and modern while the perimeter still needs better strength than standard wire fence.
Saudi / GCC and Africa projects
Often specified with galvanized or powder-coated finish routes for hot, outdoor, and project-led environments where durability and document clarity matter early.
Keep the product family and the matching hardware visible in one page.
Buyers who search 868 double wire fence often still need help choosing the lighter 656 version, the finish route, and the correct post-and-clip system. This section keeps those decisions together.
868 double wire fence panels
The stronger twin wire version for public, industrial, warehouse, and project-led perimeter systems that need higher rigidity.
656 double wire fence panels
The lighter and more economical twin wire route for projects that want the same flat-panel look with less material weight.
Hot-dip galvanized version
Useful when the project emphasizes longer-term anti-corrosion protection or wants a fully galvanized industrial finish route.
Powder-coated export version
Often selected for RAL 6005 green, RAL 7016 anthracite, or RAL 9005 black public, school, sports, and industrial projects.
Square / rectangular / peach posts
Choose the post shape by appearance, project habit, fixing method, and security hardware requirement.
Clips, brackets, and anti-theft bolts
Fixing hardware should be matched to the post type and security expectation, not quoted as an afterthought.
Pedestrian and vehicle gates
Twin wire panels often convert better when the page also explains gate matching, frame route, and hardware scope inside the same RFQ.
Upgrade to anti-climb security
When the buyer needs a tighter anti-climb route, move the RFQ toward 358 security fence instead of forcing twin wire to cover every risk level.
Send the application, target height, quantity, and destination market. We can suggest the right twin wire route before the quote is finalized.
Make the post-quote process visible before the buyer needs to ask for it.
Strong export pages do not stop at the panel description. Buyers also want to know how the system will be reviewed, packed, and matched to their project before shipment leaves the factory.
1. Project route confirmation
We align the application, target height, wire route, finish, post system, and whether gates or accessories belong in the same RFQ.
2. Drawing and specification check
Panel width, height, post type, clip route, and installation method are reviewed before the quote is treated as final.
3. Production and finish review
Panel welding, surface treatment, and hardware matching are checked against the confirmed order route before packing starts.
4. Packing and export handoff
Panels, posts, clips, bolts, and gate hardware are packed to fit the loading plan and site receiving logic more cleanly.
Questions buyers usually ask before ordering 868 double wire mesh fence.
What is the difference between 868 and 656 double wire fence?
868 uses heavier wire and gives a stronger, more rigid panel feel. 656 keeps the same twin wire structure and flat appearance but at a lighter and more economical level.
Is twin wire mesh fence better than standard welded mesh fence?
It is better for projects that need stronger rigidity, a flatter security-style appearance, and a more robust public or industrial perimeter presentation than lighter standard welded mesh panels.
What is the standard mesh opening for double wire fence panels?
50 × 200 mm is one of the most common export specifications, though project-specific changes can be discussed when required.
Can double wire fence panels be hot-dip galvanized or powder coated?
Yes. Hot-dip galvanized and powder-coated routes are both common, depending on corrosion expectations, visual requirements, and destination market needs.
Which applications fit 868 twin wire fence best?
Schools, sports grounds, warehouses, industrial parks, public buildings, municipal boundaries, and selected infrastructure projects are all common fits for twin wire mesh fence.
Can you supply posts, clips, and gates together with the panels?
Yes. Panels, posts, fixing clips, tamper-resistant bolts, and matching gate systems can be quoted together so the RFQ reflects the real install scope.
Tell us the fence height, quantity, coating, and project country.
A cleaner first message usually includes the application, preferred wire route, panel height, quantity, finish, destination market, and whether posts, clips, and gates should be quoted as one system.
- Email: contact@hulan.buma55.com
- WhatsApp: +86 150 3507 9448
- Best first subject: 868 twin wire fence + height + quantity + destination country
868 or 656 twin wire mesh fence + school / sports / warehouse / industrial project + panel height + total quantity + finish + post type if known + gate scope + destination country + target delivery timing.