What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust

   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #41  
A private dirt road serving many homes was an easement between two properties.

The summer dust became a problem so my friend set up a watering system that keep the road moist and eliminated the dust… they had unlimited spring water.

This went on for about 10 years until owners got together to pave…
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #42  

The mill had shifted to cardboard and never had a bad month…

The 65 MW power generation was exemplary.

Gaylord looked at the locations as and decided it did not need to be in California…

Years ago it was Crown Zellerbach… and after Inland Temple.
My comment is still true. Paper mills are dwindling around the country.
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #43  
Y
Our local paper mills is spending $83m expanding. Its primary product is toilet paper and paper towels.
Yep, that’s still one of the few bright spots in the paper industry, also cardboard boxes.
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #44  
Sounds like the lignin sulfonate is a bit messy and leaves tar-like deposits on equipment.

I saw also a reference to something called "Envirokleen" which is apparently also called "SynTech EDC®" (link, $723/275g tote)
"Application Rates: Depending on surface conditions and the goals of the application; typical application rates will vary from 0.10—0.50 gallons of concentrated per square yard"

If it's 11,725 sq yds, that's definitely a lot of money ($3k-$15k) for the whole road, but if you can knock that down to a 1000' section of the road, it's $500-$2.5k.

Other sources on the web quote "0.375l/m2 for normal conditions, 0.5 heavy duty, 0.7 extreme" (eg mining); sounds like 0.1 gallon/yard is "normal conditions" which a shared driveway is likely to be; "can be effective for six months or more with just one application. It is UV resistant to prevent deterioration and does not break down when wet"

I have no idea if you can buy it in relatively small quantities, but that link above does sell it in barrel sizes so maybe.
Yes it dose, when it is freshly applied, kinda....After a few minutes the liquid is absorbed by the gravel fines.

Soap and water will take it right off with no scrubbing.
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #45  
My comment is still true. Paper mills are dwindling around the country.
I wonder if higher import costs will reverse that?
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #46  
So, forgive the AI response, I'm not posting out of laziness, I'm posting it because it brings up a product I'd never heard of, and am unfamiliar with. I dont vouch for it being effective or anything, but it might be worth doing a couple minutes of "google-fu" on.

Lignin Sulfonate:** A byproduct of paper mills, binds dust for 6–12 months. Check local availability from paper mills for bulk discounts.

# **Cost Comparison Table**
| Method | Cost per Mile (Est.) | Duration | Notes |
|----------------------|----------------------|----------------|----------------------------------------|
| Salt Brine | $50–$100 | 2–4 weeks | DIY-friendly, low environmental risk |
| Lignin Sulfonate | $300–$800 | 6–12 months | Bulk discounts possible |
| Molasses Spray | $100–$200 | 1–2 months | Biodegradable, sticky residue |
| Gravel Fines Addition| $200–$500 | 6–12 months | Requires regrading |
| Enzyme Stabilizers | $500–$1,500 | 6–12 months | Eco-friendly, long-term |
My folks used that when I was growing up, got it free at the pulp mill where dad worked. Only catch was you needed a tank and spreader to use it. Some neighbors got together and set one up, used a truck from another neighbor who was a contractor to haul it. Stuff looked like red syrup coming out of the spreador bar.
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #47  
So, we got maybe 0.1" of rain, maybe 0.2" early morning, first rain in 3 weeks. So, I decided to grade the private road from the house towards main road, while there was some moisture. Anyways, slicked it up a bit, but to a large degree, it's just moving sand, and there isn't any "fixing" it, without adding clay or rock.

Anyways almost done, and a guy comes hauling butt around, ans it kinda made me think, why bother
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #48  
I did 25 yrs of road maintenance where I live now. Mostly consisted of removing washboard created by fast moving vehicles. Problem is the smoother you make it the faster people drive, and the quicker the washboard reappears. There are 12 homes on this road, 8 homes have tractors. My neighbor tried his hand on the road grading with his new tractor, naturally he suked. Used the wrong tool at the wrong time. But I wasn't about to complain. I just quiet quit. Let somebody else do it for awhile. Neighbors won't ante up for new material when needed. I tired of paying and doing the work.
We will see how this goes. I used to have a neighbor friend who was good on a tractor help but he moved away 5 years ago. I don't drive as much as I used to ... community roads are a source of aggravation.
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #49  
So, we got maybe 0.1" of rain, maybe 0.2" early morning, first rain in 3 weeks. So, I decided to grade the private road from the house towards main road, while there was some moisture. Anyways, slicked it up a bit, but to a large degree, it's just moving sand, and there isn't any "fixing" it, without adding clay or rock.

Anyways almost done, and a guy comes hauling butt around, ans it kinda made me think, why bother
Sometimes the ruts and potholes are a blessing…
 
   / What to Put on a Gravel Road to Control Dust #50  
Our road, we are like the 7th home back, and roughly 30ish total homes use the road, including one roofing company and a wild life/exotic animal place. So, figure in the neighborhood of 150 trips per day.

To make matters worse, it's the main spur, with additional roads coming off of it, and technically one additional outlet, but its Bad. Like buggy or good ground clearance, 4x4 only kinda bad. All private. There used to be a Property Owners Association that collected money for maintenance; but its defunct now; and from what I've heard, they did a crap job, never sure how the money was spent, ect.

Being 100% private, just easements, there is no reason for the county to take ownership, and on top of that, I am the county boarder with the next county north. So, why would my county maintain a road to benefit mostly people from an enemy county?

Then, add to that 2-3 Amazon drivers, UPS, USPS, Kroger, ect, that don't care at all about being up the vehicle
 

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