JRP
Platinum Member
There is a post on TBN called "Driveway Fixer". The thing is easy to make and works great. Mine keeps getting better.
I added a 3pt hookup so I can pick it up with the 3pt Speeco. (?? Search for Speeco) Now I can pull it with a chain, or use it like a 10' blade using the 3pt. It makes the smoothest road when pulled with a chain. When using a chain, I can also back up and lift it with the speeco for transport. No getting off the tractor.
The night before my seven trucks of recycled concrete topping came I made removeable 4" screed shoes for it. They bolt to the ends and are shown in the photo. The shoes hold the cutting edge 4" above the road bed. To use them you really need the fixer attached to the 3pt. When a truck would dump I would back up over the pile, lower the fixer, and drive forward. With a few passes I had a nice very flat 4" thick layer of material. The truck drivers said they had never seen gravel spread so evenly and so quickly, and suggested a patent.
Hope this helps y'all. It works far better than a blade for smoothing.
I added a 3pt hookup so I can pick it up with the 3pt Speeco. (?? Search for Speeco) Now I can pull it with a chain, or use it like a 10' blade using the 3pt. It makes the smoothest road when pulled with a chain. When using a chain, I can also back up and lift it with the speeco for transport. No getting off the tractor.
The night before my seven trucks of recycled concrete topping came I made removeable 4" screed shoes for it. They bolt to the ends and are shown in the photo. The shoes hold the cutting edge 4" above the road bed. To use them you really need the fixer attached to the 3pt. When a truck would dump I would back up over the pile, lower the fixer, and drive forward. With a few passes I had a nice very flat 4" thick layer of material. The truck drivers said they had never seen gravel spread so evenly and so quickly, and suggested a patent.
Hope this helps y'all. It works far better than a blade for smoothing.