Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete????

   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #11  
I'm starting to see a consensus....

As you should. As most gravel road potholes are relatively shallow. Concrete put into them will have no holding strength as it would in a hole dug for a post.
The good if there is a good, is that the concrete placed into the potholes will break up somewhat easily as you dig with the scarifiers to cut up/into the ground/gravel to get rid of the potholes. You are in my opinion doing exactly what you need to do with your box blade to maintain the road and the concrete is not benefitting anything or anyone.
If the road is really wet, stay off of it as you have. If it is just damp, it may be easier to dig out the pothole instead of the ground getting really hard packed.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #12  
Now that I think about it, they do have EarthCrete, which I too have done. I have a gravel pit so I use gravel instead of soil, but if a person wants to make a concrete pad on the cheap, they can buy bags of Portland Cement, spread it evenly over the ground, then take a rototiller and mix up the soil/cement powder. Moisture in the ground will harden it eventually. Or, a person can add water, and then mix it up with their rototiller.

It goes without saying that after the mixture is churned up, you screed and trowel it like you would any concrete slab.

It is just a lazy-mans way of avoiding the use of a cement mixer.

(Note: for "blocks" you can do the same thing, but put the dirt/cement mixture in paper bags. Eventually they will harden into a block. Eventually the paper will disintegrate. This works good for "blocking" up around culvert ends and such.)

(Note 2: For "lightweight concrete", sawdust can be substituted for sand/gravel/soil to make Sawdustcrete.)

In Vietnam we called it soil cement. The mixture was engineered proportions. The laterite (clay) terrain there turned to mush in the rain. Same process except it was only used for the subgrade. Gravel base and asphalt over it Short term roads just got the siol cement to get by through one rainy season.

Ron
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #13  
Noooooooooooooo. Concrete filled potholes will only create new potholes around their perimeter and make it impossible to grade. If you're in the mood to buy a new attachment, a box blade with rippers will help disturb the hard bottom of the pothole and give you "new" material to work with.

Ummm... that's exactly what he has been doing:

So I took my BB teeth to dig down and break the hard pan and get down to the bottom of the holes - as I normally do every spring.


And I agree with the others here. Your neighbors need to stop. He's not solving anything, he's just making your job more difficult.

They are trying to be helpful, however, which is a good thing. You may want to encourage that. Perhaps leave him a small pile of gravel which they can shovel onto potholes "to help smooth things over until I can get back out and regrade again". Not at all a permanent solution, but you leave them feeling as though they are contributing, and they are not making your job harder. Giving them a stake in keeping the road in good shape may also make them more protective of it: they may be inclined to have a chat with the truck driver who slams on the brakes, or the neighbor who peals out, digging stuff up.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #14  
Concrete works well for potholes, it just has to be applied properly. A full width continuous pad six inches deep will work well. You may note that many buss stops have concrete pads in place of asphalt.

Engineered soil cement used to be used in base layers all the time. Don’t know if it’s still popular. It could be spread with a grader but most was laid down and packed just like asphalt. It usually got a tack coat over it for sealing.
 
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   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #15  
Putting concrete, or even dry cement in potholes, is a totally stupid idea.
You will have concrete rocks to deal with as they rip out when grading.

Exactly right. Who in their right mind would do something like that? Use crusher run gravel, some water, and pack it with a heavy roller.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #16  
Concrete works well for potholes, it just has to be applied properly. A full width continuous pad six inches deep will work well. You may note that many buss stops have concrete pads in place of asphalt.

Engineered soil cement used to be used in base layers all the time. Don稚 know if it痴 still popular. It could be spread with a grader but most was laid down and packed just like asphalt. It usually got a tack coat over it for sealing.

The OP posted about potholes in his gravel road.
"Concrete works well for potholes"........"6 deep"?..... for filling potholes in a gravel road?
The grader blade sure won't like that.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #17  
Note: full width and extended distance.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete????
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Note: full width and extended distance.

Except that's not what they're doing. There are taking a couple bags of cement mix and dumping it the potholes - then covering them up with gravel.

Astute observers will note the mental disconnect of them being upset when I "dug" up their concrete pothole covers which I did doing normal gravel road maintenance.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #19  
Except that's not what they're doing. There are taking a couple bags of cement mix and dumping it the potholes - then covering them up with gravel.

Astute observers will note the mental disconnect of them being upset when I "dug" up their concrete pothole covers which I did doing normal gravel road maintenance.

Two add my two cents you are right on and to reinforce what others have pointed out, you can't just "fill" potholes. I have been taking care of a few common gravel drives in my 'hood, and over the years have brought in an occasional load of graded base or "process" (3/4" crushed bluestone mixed with dust-no voids!) as needed. I then rip up the bad areas with my heavy 72" box blade using the 7 ripper shanks set to lowest setting. Then retract shanks and grade with box. In my old age I finally added a hydraulic top link, so it makes the job a lot easier. I don't have a hydraulic side link so I have to jump off
to set the slope but that is also critical IMO.

"Gravel Road "101"...Get the water off as quick as you can". So I have always tried to maintain a crown and make sure I cut reliefs at edges so the water does not build up.
 
   / Gravel road: Filling potholes with concrete???? #20  
Two add my two cents you are right on and to reinforce what others have pointed out, you can't just "fill" potholes. I have been taking care of a few common gravel drives in my 'hood, and over the years have brought in an occasional load of graded base or "process" (3/4" crushed bluestone mixed with dust-no voids!) as needed. I then rip up the bad areas with my heavy 72" box blade using the 7 ripper shanks set to lowest setting. Then retract shanks and grade with box. In my old age I finally added a hydraulic top link, so it makes the job a lot easier. I don't have a hydraulic side link so I have to jump off
to set the slope but that is also critical IMO.

"Gravel Road "101"...Get the water off as quick as you can". So I have always tried to maintain a crown and make sure I cut reliefs at edges so the water does not build up.

You do very obviously understand the proper methodology!
 

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