PILOON
Super Star Member
For drive maintenance all U really need is a drag.
A decent drag consists of 3 blades, the first chops bumps, the 2nd spreads topping around and the 3 rd finishes the job.
A drag can be towed behind any vehicle be it a tractor ATV or PU.
We maintained 4 kms of gravel road for 10 years with such a unit with but 2-3 passes/yr.
Road was much used by 75 residents and all their guests.
Our drag was 8ft X 8ft with the 3 'blades' set at different angles, idea being the one angle would counteract the side force of the other.
5 pieces are needed, 3 for blades and 2 for the frame that holds the blades.
3 chains/cable from front corners attached to vehicle bumper corners.
With the angled blades humps and bumps are sheered and the topping slide over to fill the dips.
By the time the 3rd blade has passed you have a finely graded roadbed.
3 blades helps minimize dips as there is always 2 acting as a base while the 3rd chops the tops.
This is not a new ides as I recall back in the '50's the local gov't graded all the county roads using a team to pull such a rig.
I have made 2 such drags over the years, first 8 X 8 ft for the road and the current one a mere 5 X 5 for a private drive.
A couple of passes and you do as great a job as a huge grader can do.
A decent drag consists of 3 blades, the first chops bumps, the 2nd spreads topping around and the 3 rd finishes the job.
A drag can be towed behind any vehicle be it a tractor ATV or PU.
We maintained 4 kms of gravel road for 10 years with such a unit with but 2-3 passes/yr.
Road was much used by 75 residents and all their guests.
Our drag was 8ft X 8ft with the 3 'blades' set at different angles, idea being the one angle would counteract the side force of the other.
5 pieces are needed, 3 for blades and 2 for the frame that holds the blades.
3 chains/cable from front corners attached to vehicle bumper corners.
With the angled blades humps and bumps are sheered and the topping slide over to fill the dips.
By the time the 3rd blade has passed you have a finely graded roadbed.
3 blades helps minimize dips as there is always 2 acting as a base while the 3rd chops the tops.
This is not a new ides as I recall back in the '50's the local gov't graded all the county roads using a team to pull such a rig.
I have made 2 such drags over the years, first 8 X 8 ft for the road and the current one a mere 5 X 5 for a private drive.
A couple of passes and you do as great a job as a huge grader can do.