Road material

   / Road material #1  

Jlblake

Silver Member
Joined
Dec 1, 2019
Messages
174
Location
Marquez, Texas
Tractor
John Deere 2030 Diesel
I'm sorry for the dumb question. In the area where I live, I can find anything I want simply by googling, reviews and so forth. At my place in the country, I'm having some challenges. You guys have been priceless so I'm hoping you can help again. I want to do some work on my road/driveway. I will need some crushed concrete or crushed white rock. What is the best way to find a provider for this stuff? Do you look for the closest place? Are the quality differences? How do you know if you are getting a fair price? What else do I need to know? Do they dump it all in one spot or will/should they dump it along the drive?

Thanks folks!
 
   / Road material #2  
I found a trucking service that delivers gravel. They knew where to get what I wanted and spread it out by tail dumping it on my 1400 foot road. All I had to kick a couple of small piles down where he started dumping each load.
 
   / Road material #3  
Around here transportation can be the big cost. Ask neighbors who they have used and how it worked out. Word-of-mouth is usually a very good method to get good results. If you want it "tailgate spread" ask if they can do it. Around here our crushed rock is basalt. It is harder than diamonds. It WILL NOT break down into fines when driven on. I always ask for crushed and not screened. The fines mixed in are what make it compact.
 
   / Road material #4  
What you can get depends upon what is available at your location. My neighbor got crushed asphalt spread and compacted. When I did my driveway it was no longer available. Consequently I have a crushed river rock with finings for a base and two inches of asphalt on top.
 
   / Road material #5  
Up here in the northeast many like what we call hard pack for driveways more so if driveway has grade/slope.
Good truck operator will adjust tailgate chains and spread as he goes and that will save you lot of work.
 
   / Road material #6  
Word of mouth... if you don't have anyone, I've just called a quarry, and ask how much a truck load of Crusher Run was, they usually have drivers that bring it to you. If price seemed OK, I ask if they can tailgate spread it.

It's rock... not rocket science. I quit using one quarry since they did not have as much "fines", I'm lucky we have 3 rock quarries to choose from... Now I just borrow my friends dump trailer, $50 / 7 tons. If you have the time, a dump trailer will pay for itself!!!
 
   / Road material #7  
Around here transportation can be the big cost. Ask neighbors who they have used and how it worked out. Word-of-mouth is usually a very good method to get good results. If you want it "tailgate spread" ask if they can do it. Around here our crushed rock is basalt. It is harder than diamonds. It WILL NOT break down into fines when driven on. I always ask for crushed and not screened. The fines mixed in are what make it compact.
actually. Basalt’s hardness is pretty close to that of diamond on Mohs’ hardness scale, which is a scale that determines hardness based on how easy it is to scratch a particular mineral. Basalt on this scale is around an 8–8.5 depending on the source meaning it can be scratched by anything harder than it, a masonry drill bit, and of course by more basalt. Diamond, however, is a 10 on the scale meaning it can only be scratched by more Diamond.
 
   / Road material #8  
Talk to your local county supervisor/transportation dep./road crew people.
I needed some gravel for fill for various projects. Our uncle talked to the local transportation dep guy for us and the next thing I knew he came by and within a week they dumped a 5 ton truckload of mixed gravel for free.
I'm still using it for small projects.
 
   / Road material #9  
Is there a landscaping business in one of the surrounding towns? Place that sells pallets of grass? what about a neighbor, or just somebody that you drive by their place and they have a nice gravel driveway?

Where I live in East Texas, rock is very rare. It all comes from Terrell, which is close to Dallas. Crushed concrete has become very popular, and in my opinion, but better then the limestone rock that comes from the quarry in Terrell.

Tyler has grown to three different places to buy rock. And then on Craigslist, there are a couple more options, but their prices seem kind of odd. They sell it by the truck load and it's a fixed price. When I buy it from one of the yards, it's by the yard for a dump truck, or if I buy it buy the Semi Truck trailer load, it's priced by the ton according to the weight ticket from the quarry. The driver drives to the quarry, gets the load, then brings it to my place and I write him a check when he gets here.
 
   / Road material #10  
If you can get clean screened to 3/4" crushed concrete I highly recommend it.

The supplier I bought a few loads from was high when I got it and last time I checked they thought it was gold. I found a demolition company that said they had plenty at $200 for 16 tons but they didn't deliver. Next time I buy I am going to look at their stuff to see if it's comparable to what I got before then search for someone to haul it that won't kill me.
 

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