How to Choose Batting Cage Poles and Frame Material
The frame is the skeleton of your cage: it decides how tight the net hangs, how the structure handles wind, and whether year eight looks like year one. Here's how the three real frame options — steel, fiberglass, and wood — actually compare, and how to spec whichever one you pick.
The Three Frame Materials
Galvanized steel
The professional standard. Steel pipe (commonly 2"–2.5" outside diameter for backyard spans) holds net tension without bowing, shrugs off weather, and supports accessories — lights, pulleys, netting trolleys. It needs concrete footings and costs the most: figure $1,500–$4,000 for a typical 55–70 ft frame installed. If you're building once and keeping it a decade, steel is the answer.
Fiberglass poles with tension cables
The kit-cage standard. Flexible fiberglass uprights and steel cable ridgelines cost a fraction of steel ($400–$1,200), install in a weekend without concrete, and their give is actually a feature — errant balls and falling limbs bounce off rather than bend anything. The compromises: the net never hangs drum-tight, tall configurations sway in wind, and cheap kits' cable hardware is the first thing to fail. Great for starter cages and players under high-school velocity.
Wood posts
Pressure-treated 4x4s or 6x6s set in concrete are the DIY-lumberyard option. Cheap and sturdy at first, but wood moves — posts twist and lean over seasons, taking net tension with them. If you go wood, oversize the posts, set them deep (a third of the post below grade), and expect to re-tension yearly.
Spec Details That Separate Good Frames From Regrets
Footings: steel and wood want concrete footings below your frost line — floating posts heave and lean. Corner geometry: corners take the most cable load; kits with reinforced corner poles outlast identical kits without them. Cable and hardware: stainless or galvanized turnbuckles and thimbles; bare cable ends fray and fail. Wind: in open, gusty sites, favor steel or a lower-profile cage — a 12-ft fiberglass cage in a wind corridor is a sail. Net attachment: whatever the frame, hang the net with snaps or ties you can adjust seasonally; nets stretch and frames don't.
Match the Frame to the Build
The frame should be about a quarter to a third of your total budget — see where it fits in our complete cost breakdown — and it has to match your netting weight: heavy #60 net on a light fiberglass kit sags the ridgeline it's hung on, a mismatch our netting guide helps you avoid. Sizing questions (length, width, height and their clearances) live in the space planning guide.
See Frames in the Wild
Every private cage on CageList is somebody's solved version of this exact decision. Book an hour in a steel-framed cage and a kit cage near you and you'll feel the difference in net response immediately — cheap research before you order.
Installation-Day Checklist
Whichever material you land on, the install goes right when the sequence goes right. Mark utilities before any digging — the free 811 call is non-negotiable. Set corner posts first and string a line between them; every intermediate post references that line, never its own measurement. Check plumb twice per post: once when the concrete is wet, once thirty minutes later, because posts drift as concrete settles. Let footings cure a full 48–72 hours before hanging cable or net — loading green concrete is how straight posts become leaning ones. Hang the net loose, square it to the frame, then tension in passes (a quarter-turn per turnbuckle, all the way around, repeat) rather than cranking one corner tight. And photograph the finished hardware: when something loosens in two years, the photo tells you what "right" looked like.
Frequently Asked Questions
What pipe size for a steel cage frame?
Backyard spans commonly use 2"–2.5" OD galvanized pipe with corner bracing; long unsupported ridgelines need intermediate uprights.
Do fiberglass kits survive winter?
The poles do; snow-loaded nets are the killer. Drop or slack the net before heavy snow and the kit lasts years longer.
How deep should posts be set?
Below frost line, and roughly a third of post height as a rule of thumb — an 8-ft exposed post wants about 3–4 ft of buried depth in concrete.
Can I hang a heavy net on a kit frame?
Check the kit's rated net weight. #36 is usually fine; #60 typically wants steel or added ridge support.
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