Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel

   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #11  
A tail wheel will do wonders for your rear blade.

 
   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #12  
On my 1/2 mile road, every spring, I use the scarifiers on my box blade to chew up the gravel around the potholes that developed during the spring thaw.

Then I use my horse grader to restore the crown and do any contouring/ditching. The long wheelbase gets rid of any hoops and hollows. This is my most useful driveway tool.


Pony Grader.jpg


The rest of the summer, I use my homemade road drag. It takes out the washboards and the guide wheel maintains the crown.

 
   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #13  
I was fortunate to observe municipal gravel road maintenance in my youth.
I duplicated their rig when we built our 3 mile cottage access road.

The rig consisted of 3 blades set up as an 8 ft square rig.
Commonly referred to as a 'drag'.
3 'blades' did all the work.
Our first rig was made from 6" X 6" timbers with 3/8" steed flats lag bolted as cutting edges.
Front and rear blades were perpendicular to the road bed while the center was at an angle.
Front blade would chop the high spots, 2 nd (angled blade) would move material sideways and fill in the dips and the rear blade smooth the roadbed.
2 chains from front 'drag' corners went to the outside ends of an old Willis Jeep.

2 passes would leave our road bed looking like a freshly paved road bed.
Later the city did the grading with a huge grader but it never did a better job than we did with our DIY drag.

The drag would ride up and over big imbedded rocks while the big grader would catch and snag on them occasionally tearing them out.
If it simply 'snagged' it would then leave a blade width hump while our drag spread the material nicely.

U need 3 blades for it to work.
2 serve as a reference 'base' while the third provides the cutting action.
Sort of averaging it out.

LOL, while posting this AIRBISKIT was also posting.
His 3rd photo is very similar to the drag I was describing.
But as U see a simple 'drag' really works wonders.
Last drag I made I added a flat surface to mount additional weigh for more aggressive action.
If a road surface was very compact U could even add teeth to the front blade.
 
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   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #14  
I had similar issues, box blade worked ok but I have great results using my LAND PRIDE LAND PLANE. Mine is the heavy one with adjustable blade height. Use the scarifiers twice per year to break things up a bit . then drag it out both directions. Once finished I do a touch up often enough to keep things smooth holding off the woop de do's made by the UPS truck, 2 wheel drive cars and rain.
 
   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #15  
Then I use my horse grader to restore the crown and do any contouring/ditching. The long wheelbase gets rid of any hoops and hollows. This is my most useful driveway tool.


View attachment 667779

Nice grader!

I think my next tractor purchase will be a grader, but the kind the highway departments use. I can see a lot of use with one. Kind of out of the scope of this conversation, but I also like yours as well.
 
   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #16  
A tail wheel will do wonders for your rear blade.


Always thought the tail wheel concept to be a plus and one could let top link (chain?) just be slack enough to allow blade to just follow, but short enough to be lifted when necessary.... Also concept of "edge tamers" for FEL and snow use may be a option for rear blade as it would turn blade into semi bucket scraper.....

EdgeTamer3_1024x1024.jpg


Picture for concept, adapt as necessary...

Dale
 
   / Chasing My Tail Grading Gravel #17  
I do similar maintenance every other year, (for the past 20+ years) to 800' of gravel driveway with a 6' box scraper and 8' rake with grade wheels. About half the time I don't bother with the rake.

I've found speed is not your friend, slow down and I bet those washboards smooth out.
 
 

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