Spreading gravel

   / Spreading gravel #21  
I maintain a private road that is one mile long. About 3 years ago I started to purchase class five replacement gravel delivered by a belly dump truck because it was cheaper per yard that way. The bottom line is that having it delivered in that fashion really does provide for a very nice crown on the roadway. I spread it a little with the back of the back mounted blade on my JD 4400 and in no time I am done. You can request the driver to set the dump rate by adjusting the chains on the dump doors so you don't get too much crown. I definitely will continue to purchase the replacement gravel delivered in belly load trucks verses traditional dump trucks.
 
   / Spreading gravel #22  
Y'all are making me jealous!
Our driveway is so challenging that we can only get gravel delivered by tandem dump trucks!

It takes about (6) 17 ton loads to completly coat the drive 4 inches by 8 feet wide.
And that means it costs us almost a complete load just for delivery!


J
 
   / Spreading gravel #23  
I just cal the driver I want, pay him. That way I get it done the way I want it! ~~ grnspot110
 
   / Spreading gravel #24  
Picker77 - nice job spreading the gravel.:thumbsup: How did you spread it? Did you pick up buckets of rock with your FEL, drive to the place you wanted it and then dump it and smooth it with your FEL or did you back up to the piles with your back blade up, drop your back blade and grade it out that way? Or did you use a combination of both (or some other way)?

I've seen video of a guy doing it the second way, but it didn't look too safe. He was using an old Ford without a ROPS, charging back up onto a 5 of 6 foot pile of rock and then using his back blade.

I'm going to re-gravel my driveway this spring and have never done it before. My driveway is about 80 feet long and about a 12 foot elevation drop from the road down to the end of the driveway. Any suggestions anyone has would be appreciated.
 
   / Spreading gravel #25  
SBB said:
Picker77 - nice job spreading the gravel.:thumbsup: How did you spread it? Did you pick up buckets of rock with your FEL, drive to the place you wanted it and then dump it and smooth it with your FEL or did you back up to the piles with your back blade up, drop your back blade and grade it out that way? Or did you use a combination of both (or some other way)?

I've seen video of a guy doing it the second way, but it didn't look too safe. He was using an old Ford without a ROPS, charging back up onto a 5 of 6 foot pile of rock and then using his back blade.

I'm going to re-gravel my driveway this spring and have never done it before. My driveway is about 80 feet long and about a 12 foot elevation drop from the road down to the end of the driveway. Any suggestions anyone has would be appreciated.

That short... if 8 feet wide have him drop a little at the top and tailgate spread on the way out.
Then pretty it up with the tractor..
Use a box blade, back spread with the bucket..

My gravel guy always says his load is about 100 feet by 8 feet x about 4 inches...
~ 16 tons...
 
   / Spreading gravel #26  
I maintain about 800' of private lane for me and two neighbors. Last time I had gravel delivered it came in a pair of belly-dump semis, and they laid the gravel down in two very long skinny piles by cracking the belly doors part way and driving slowly away. Except for a bit of a dicey balancing act on top of the piles to shear off the top of the piles with the box blade (go very slow and watch the steering!), those long continuous piles made spreading a piece of cake, and I was done in two or three hours.

Yesterday, when 52 tons of crusher run arrived in two trucks from the same outfit, they had upgraded to brand new Peterbilt tractors (nice trucks, btw) with end gate trailers instead of belly dumps. I asked if they could crack the end gate, partially elevate the bed, and spread the gravel by driving slow like tandem axle dumpers can do. No such luck, they considered that too dangerous (rollover concerns), so instead dumped it in a seemingly endless series of piles about 30' apart the entire length of the lane. There were 20+ piles. The before photo shows a few of them. Spreading from piles like this was much more time consuming--but probably somewhat safer--than the old way. Had to put six hours on the 3032E's meter and a serious crick in my neck, but it's pretty much done except for some minor smoothing to do later after it packs down a little from rain and traffic. And as a bonus the lane has a decent crown again.

Having Top and Tilt made a world of difference in repairing the crown of this lane. This job gave the loader and box blade their first serious workouts since new, and the JD 3032E performed in stellar fashion.

With that outfit, I wouldn't spread it either, and I suspect that those saying, the drivers didn't know what they were doing, missed the part in the original post that they were using trailers.:eek:
 
   / Spreading gravel
  • Thread Starter
#27  
Picker77 - nice job spreading the gravel.:thumbsup: How did you spread it?

I'm going to re-gravel my driveway this spring and have never done it before. My driveway is about 80 feet long and about a 12 foot elevation drop from the road down to the end of the driveway. Any suggestions anyone has would be appreciated.

I have a tooth bar on my FEL, so I just curled the bucket down a bit short of vertical and started digging in and backing up a few feet, flattening the piles like big elongated pancakes in the general direction I wanted them (ie, toward each other). The tips of the tooth bar's teeth gave me a fairly consistent depth for the initial pile-spreading. Once all the piles were pancaked, I just went to work with my 5-1/2' box blade to blend them together, and used the HSL to do the crowning.

Lots of instant opinions on here on gravel, but my experience has been 4" is a bit too deep in one shot. Deep gravel (at least with crusher run) tends to "mush" to each side of tire tracks when driven on, almost like driving in mud--with the result being it doesn't pack as well or as quickly as a thinner layer, say 2" or so. I'd recommend a 2-3" layer, drive on it a few months and work it over several times with a blade, then follow with another thin layer. I used to subscribe to the "more is better" theory on gravel myself, but an old-timer motor grader operator for the county re-educated me a few years back, and I've found his advice to be right on.

BTW, a 12' drop in 80' is pretty steep to hold gravel in a heavy rain, so be sure you have a good crown and good drainage on each side. If water starts to channel in some tire ruts and that stuff starts to move downhill, it's all over. Don't ask how I know. :laughing:
 
   / Spreading gravel #28  
With that outfit, I wouldn't spread it either, and I suspect that those saying, the drivers didn't know what they were doing, missed the part in the original post that they were using trailers.:eek:

Yep.............I spent many years with a 30' dump. You do not spread with those unless you want them on their side.

You can spread with a 24' in some situations like a new road bed which is smooth and level.

I have seen more than one upset just because the load hung on one side while dumping and sitting still.
 
   / Spreading gravel #29  
I hadn't realized there was that much difference between a tandem and a dump trailer until I started reading this post. Good info.

Sean
 
   / Spreading gravel #30  
I thought these these dump beds had bin vibrators to help ensure the load doesn't stick?
 

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