Gravel Driveway

   / Gravel Driveway #31  
<font color=blue>Now that the ground is dryer, I could just level out the hole with the front blade, and dump some dirt in it, over it, and flatten it a bit with my buddie's roller.</font color=blue>

Sound good to me Trev. If the hole's large enough you could drop some big rocks in there. That will help stabilze and pack it. Since you're moving to a new driveway, I wouldn't bother doing much more.

Good luck!/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
 
   / Gravel Driveway #32  
I found this on another great TBN thread

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.state.me.us/dep/blwq/docwatershed/camproad.pdf>Camp Road Maintenance</A>

It is a comprehensive manual with lots of pictures. Oh, they like that rake...

I have about a mile of roads, and never dreamed I could maintain them, but I am starting and am having success...
 
   / Gravel Driveway #33  
If I could own only one tool for driveway maintenance, it would be a boxblade, no question.
 
   / Gravel Driveway #34  
Paul,
How big a job is it to switch from BH to box scraper and vice versa on the B2710?
 
   / Gravel Driveway #35  
My dad-in-law lives 2 miles up a county road outside of Bozeman Mt. The road grader never seems to come by frequently enough and the road gets some terrible pot-holes and washboard. Dad-in-law has about an 8' length of railroad steel that he drags behind his massey. He'll go up and down the road at a fairly quick clip (2 miles each way) and the weight of that steel really does a remarkable job. We keep the rail angled a bit, about like the grader would and we try to pull gravel first from the sides to the center then back from the center to the sides. We have fairly good success in knocking off washboard and placing loose fill in depressions.

Jeanne
 
   / Gravel Driveway #36  
Saw my neighbr out on his 4-wheeler the other day working his driveway. He was pulling a heavy piece of I-beam that he had welded a couple chain hooks on. Pulled it at a slight angle, and was heavy enough that it was working the surface and filling in the ruts. I was going to offer my flex-tine harrow, but his homemade blade was doing pretty good. He is down to a layer of packed fines - has gravel coming this week. Puts down new gravel evry 3-4 yrs to make up for what is plowed in winter.
 
   / Gravel Driveway #37  
I bought a KK 60" box scraper a couple of weeks ago for my JD 4100, which is a 20 HP HST with R-4 tires. I haven't used it a lot and am still getting used to it, but it will peel up a boxfull of dirt and move it around fine. For dirt digging and leveling as in driveway maintenance, I'd say your 22 HP Kubota should do fine with a 5 footer. And from what others have said about the King Kutter, you won't go wrong for the money.

<font color=green>Duane</font color=green>
 
   / Gravel Driveway #38  
2 more cents. I've had good results with the boxblade teeth down on first pass to break the surface 3" or so. Next drag blade teeth up in float position with the three-point at a bit of tilt to produce a crown. Works for me. Also an operator I've used over the years suggested once that when using the fel to work as a grader or leveler use the bucket with a load in it and in the float position blade slightly tilted back to keep from dumping load. Works for me too. It must be a wounderful thing to have a drive so long to give a bumper of space between you and the passers by.
As for purchasing impliments-- In the area I live in auctions are frequent and as long as one doesn't get carried away with the bidding a good place to pick up equipment and have fun at the same time. Best to y-all
 
   / Gravel Driveway #39  
The backhoe takes about 10-15 minutes to put on, (assuming you left it on hard level ground). The fussiest part is aligning the toplink bracket with the backhoe toplink bar. It takes just a little less time to take off.
The boxblade goes on in less than 5 minutes (not including setting ripper height), and off in less than 2 minutes.
 
   / Gravel Driveway #40  
Don't know about the rest of you, but I'm getting an education here. I was going to get a rake, then a box scraper, then a rake, etc, etc, and this thread is helping a lot. I talked to a dealer today, and he showed me something else. It seems to be a middle ground/all purpose answer to beenthere's comments on penetration, and retain the grading ability of a rake.

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.landpride.com/lp/products/sf25_specs.html>Land Pride</A> has a scarifier that has provision for mounting another 3-pt implement behind it. I'm quite interested; I'd like comments on quality of this manufacturer. I'll probably post a similar comment over on Attachments and call it LandPride.
 

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