crazyal
Super Member
I'm going to say the grading scraper (similar to a land plane) would be the one attachment I would have hands down if I could only have one. The box blade and rear blade have their uses and each one can do something much better than the other attachments but the grading scraper is very easy to use and will give great results. The difference between a land plane and a grading scrapper is length. The land planes tend to be much longer while the grading scraper is shorter to go around corners easier. Most grading scrapers either come with or have the option of having ripping teeth. If your drive gets packed hard in the summer and/ or tends to have pot holes you'll want the rippers.
My drive has some hills and the gravel ends up at the bottom. I had a box blade that I would try to pull the gravel back up the drive but found that after the first pass the gravel would get too loose and I just couldn't get enough traction. I ended up using the front bucket to scoop and dump the gravel where I wanted it. With the grading scraper I find that I'm touching up the driveway all the time because it's fun, it's easy, and it looks like I just had loads of gravel dumped on the driveway so I don't need to bring as much gravel back up the hill.
Things to look for in a grading scrapper are ripping teeth (if you have a hard packed/ pot holed drive). Weight, too light and it will just bounce and not dig. For a BX I would want no wider than 5' and about 500lbs to 600lbs. Replaceable wear parts. It'll last you decades so you're going to need to replace the parts that wear. Adjustable blades, When being aggressive I lower mine about 1/2" below the skids and once the gravel has been loosened up I raise them about 1/2" above the skids so I'm just leveling without building up much gravel in front of the blades.
My drive has some hills and the gravel ends up at the bottom. I had a box blade that I would try to pull the gravel back up the drive but found that after the first pass the gravel would get too loose and I just couldn't get enough traction. I ended up using the front bucket to scoop and dump the gravel where I wanted it. With the grading scraper I find that I'm touching up the driveway all the time because it's fun, it's easy, and it looks like I just had loads of gravel dumped on the driveway so I don't need to bring as much gravel back up the hill.
Things to look for in a grading scrapper are ripping teeth (if you have a hard packed/ pot holed drive). Weight, too light and it will just bounce and not dig. For a BX I would want no wider than 5' and about 500lbs to 600lbs. Replaceable wear parts. It'll last you decades so you're going to need to replace the parts that wear. Adjustable blades, When being aggressive I lower mine about 1/2" below the skids and once the gravel has been loosened up I raise them about 1/2" above the skids so I'm just leveling without building up much gravel in front of the blades.