Land plane for gravel driveway?

   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #1  

L321

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Joined
Dec 28, 2024
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2
Tractor
Yanmar 1700
I have a Yanmar 1700 I bought to maintain my gravel driveway, about 1/8 mile. 1/3 of the drive is solely mine and 2/3 of it are shared. My part is #57 gravel and basically just need to spread/level the gravel. The remaining 2/3 is finer material, packed hard with some potholes. I have a 5 foot grader blade and used it to spread gravel on mine, but couldn't get it nice and level.

I am thinking a land plane may be more useful for my situation. Looks like it could get the gravel on my part nice and level and I could use it on the shared part without risk of making it worse. If this is accurate, what do I need in a land plane? I'm thinking 4 foot wide? Does it need scarifies to fix the potholes? Would one of the cheap ones ($600-800) work for this situation or is it worth it for the beefier ones ($1500-2000)? Also considering building one myself.

Any suggestions? Thanks!
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #2  
Maybe, but look into a 'york rake'. Basically a multi-tined 3 pt attachment. If equipped with gauge wheels, chain for a top link and running at 30 to 45 degrees, it will smooth out any ruts or potholes and comb the crumbles to the center. You need a wide one, too because you want to cover both driveway directions when the angle is at 30-45 degrees. When it's been combed like this, make a run with the rake at zero angle to make a flat topped roadway. When I had gravel (about 800' of it), I would use my 3pt rototiller to bring the gravel back up. After a rainy day, it's no big deal to till it. May bounce a bit and scare the neighbors dog from the sound. It will also double the speeds that visitors or delivery trucks approach your house with.
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #3  
Our driveway is steep, winding and must withstand 60” rain per year. 2” of rain tonight mostly in a few hours. Most of driveway is a 300year old wagon trail that has large rocks in the gullies. Now covered with crushed stone. Can’t really use scarifiers. Maintaining pitch and crown essential getting water off the road.

Have used the scarifiers to help level lawn and pasture areas.

The way the landplane works to classify, distribute and level with minimum base disturbance has eliminated potholes. Easily maintains a more durable road base. Grading uphill is can tax a 60hp, 4x4 tractor in some spots with 6’ land plane. Haven’t used the grader blade or box blade on the driveway since buying the landplane.
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #4  
My land plane works good on my 1/2 mile driveway. The skid shoes wear fast, keep an eye on them. I try to keep the rear blade so it never overflows, it just kinda clips the high spots.
Pot holes need to be dug out, not just filled, they will come back.
Then I bought a Cat 12N grader and haven't touched the land plane since, I'll probably sell it. I'm no grader operator, but boy, does it do a nice job.
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #5  
I have a mile long gravel driveway - straight as an arrow - with a deep valley in the middle. The driveway was constructed in 1982. After 40 years of use - by only me - the surface is now a mix of rock, gravel, sand, silt and volcanic ash. It dries out after spring rains and becomes as hard as 30 year old concrete.

I use three implements to maintain the driveway. Rear blade - Land Plane Grading Scraper with scarifiers and a Roll Over Box blade.

About once every three years or so - I "redo" the surface by grading material out of the ditches. This has allowed me to maintain the driveway in good condition w/out purchasing more gravel.

My driveway is not perfect - its a true country driveway. I have better use for my $$$$ than to keep it in showroom status.

Besides - there are benefits to having a driveway with a few imperfections. Slows those down who would like to drive 45+ down the driveway.
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #6  
I have a Yanmar 1700 I bought to maintain my gravel driveway, about 1/8 mile. 1/3 of the drive is solely mine and 2/3 of it are shared. My part is #57 gravel and basically just need to spread/level the gravel. The remaining 2/3 is finer material, packed hard with some potholes. I have a 5 foot grader blade and used it to spread gravel on mine, but couldn't get it nice and level.

I am thinking a land plane may be more useful for my situation. Looks like it could get the gravel on my part nice and level and I could use it on the shared part without risk of making it worse. If this is accurate, what do I need in a land plane? I'm thinking 4 foot wide? Does it need scarifies to fix the potholes? Would one of the cheap ones ($600-800) work for this situation or is it worth it for the beefier ones ($1500-2000)? Also considering building one myself.

Any suggestions? Thanks!


I bought a land plane for maintaining my drive and short of a Harley rake, I believe it's the best tool for the task. I got the 48" one and although the Kubota BX will pull it, it works better behind the 4320. Should have bought the 72"


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   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #7  
I use a rear blade and a landplane to maintain my long drive. It's make up varies from good base and 3/4 gravel surface to old logging road with some 3/4 crushed stone mixed in. We also have a spring mud season. I use the blade to contour for good water run off and I use the landplane for surface maintenance. You want a heavy land plane. Mine is 5' wide and 650 lbs. I do not have scarifiers.

Rear blade

CornerRearBlade.JPG


Landplane

CornerLPGS1.JPG



Rear blade

P1100934.JPG


Landplane

P1100949.JPG



P1100988.JPG



gg
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #8  
dj1701 - one could say - "the chosen path was a bit wet". I have a 80 foot section in my driveway that has the same problem. Neighbors field drains down onto my driveway. AND - it's a real PITA to keep it draining on beyond my driveway.

Folks have said to me - more gravel, more gravel, and on and on. Gravel is not the problem at this spot in my driveway. Drainage is the problem.

All the land around these parts is classified as Open Range Land. This means - no fences. The cows can go just about anywhere.

I almost split a gut when visitors say - "Do you know there are stray cows on your driveway? How often do you have to scoop their poo off your driveway?" City folks should do a U-turn when they see that - City Limits sign.

The cows like my muddy section. They stomp the living daylights out of this area. Makes annual maintenance just a tad more challenging. However - all the cow poo might help bind things together. One can never tell.
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #9  
Landplane at work

CornerLPGS2.JPG


The land plane is my go-to road tool. I use way more often than the rear blade. Keeping the surface in good shape helps maintain the road contour.

gg
 
   / Land plane for gravel driveway? #10  
Weight is your friend. Mine is a 6', wish it was bigger. That's why I bought the 12N, 12' mold board.
 
 

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