«Previous    Next»
Fencer Repairman Owns Fantastic Collection Of Chargers
When Kevin Blase turns on the juice to his wall of old fencer chargers, bulbs light up, marbles roll, and a cacophony of clicks fills the air. Blase runs a business fixing fencers and occasionally adds a “new” old fencer to his collection of more than 50 antiques.
“My collection started when people couldn’t justify the cost of fixing an old charger and just told me to keep it,” says Blase. “After a while I started going on the internet and looking for interesting models.”
Blase learned the fencer repair business from his grandfather, who fixed fencers from 1973 until 1990. What started as a hobby for Blase grew into a full-time business. He runs an authorized service repair center for Zareba and Parmak but regularly works on more than 30 different brands.
“I’ve repaired fencers from New York to California and Texas to Canada,” he says. “We keep a large inventory of parts on hand.”
Blase suggests FARM SHOW readers give him a call if they are having a problem with their fencer. He may be able to diagnose it over the phone.
“If it’s clicking, but there is no charge, it’s often the transformer,” says Blase. “If it’s not doing anything, it’s probably the circuit board, which I can often rebuild for half the cost of a new board.”
Blase warns that turnaround depends on the time of the year, with summer being peak demand with up to a 3-week wait.
His collection has many unusual chargers, including an early one that sold for $1.50 and used a coil from a Model T Ford. He even has the wooden box the coil came in.
He also has a Coburn One-Wire electric fencer, made by a Wisconsin dairyman. According to a great grandson, Orrie Coburn saw a homemade fencer when visiting Europe in the early 1920’s. When he came home, he built his own. By 1925 he was selling the first mass-produced electric fencer under the Coburn Company brand. While no longer selling fencers, the company continues serving livestock producers.
Early fencers often included very visible components that told the user the fencer was working. One included a marble in a glass tube. Each time the transformer magnetized, it would push the marble up the tube. When the marble returned, it would hit a point and break the circuit.
A fencer from Leitner Electric Company, Dalton, Ohio, had 2 bulbs inside a glass jar. If one was lit, the fencer was working. If a short occurred on the fence, the other bulb would light up.
Blase says nearly all the fencers in his collection still work.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, The Fencer Shop, 2406 E. 23rd Rd., Polk, Neb. 68654 (ph 402-765-7222; www.thefencershop.com; www.thefencershop.net).


  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2019 - Volume #43, Issue #5