pot holes

   / pot holes #1  

SootyBob

New member
Joined
Apr 23, 2001
Messages
10
Location
Holly, MI
Tractor
Kubota BX2200
I have a dirt drive. Of course, every year it grows a new litter of pot holes. In the past I have filled them with garden rocks and wet mortar, concrete and brick debris from other projects. Just got my 22oo today with back blade and FEL. What is the best way to keep my driveway up to speed? And with what implement?
TIA,
Sooty Bob
 
   / pot holes #2  
Bob -- I have both similar and opposite issues with my driveway and road. Gotta keep the driveway smooth, so I basically angle and slightly tilt the rear blade and crown the drive a couple of times each year.

I do the same with the road past my home...until the first speeding tourist sends a cloud of dust into my home. Then I go up and down the road raising and lowering the blade every five feet or so. The official purpose of this is to create waterbars to divert the runoff into the ditches. Unofficially, and to my great delight, they are very effective speedbumps. I cherish the sight of a BMW speeding up that eight foot wide road and slamming on the brakes as the driver sees the first bump. /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif

Pete

www.GatewayToVermont.com
 
   / pot holes #3  
In my experience, potholes are permanent unless you "make them equal" to the road around them. I used to do what you did (fill them with rocks and stuff), but they kept coming back.

Now that I have the 'bota, I use the scarifiers to tear up the road around the potholes, then grade it smooth. I use a box blade, not a regular blade.


The GlueGuy
 
   / pot holes #4  
SootyBob
I have a very long drive that never gets potholes. We pull a cultipacker (sp?) over it after it rains. Stays very smooth. Ever tried that?
regards
Mutt
 
   / pot holes #5  
SootyBob
DON'T let them kid you! The ones claiming no pot holes have just found a unique way to pay off the PotHole Fairy! /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif/w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif
 
   / pot holes
  • Thread Starter
#6  
What is a cultipeper?
TIA,
BOb
 
   / pot holes #7  
OK,OK, I CONFESS!!! /w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif /w3tcompact/icons/blush.gif I got one(tiny)
at the top of a hill. Whew! coming clean ain't so tough after all. Turning off computer now and going out to fix it...
regards
Mutt
 
   / pot holes #8  
I have about a quarter mile long, steep circular dirt driveway. After all the melting snow it was pretty rutted and had a few shallow pot holes. I went up and down each half with a york rake (aka rock rake, landscape rake) for about an hour and a half each. Its real smooth now! I guess I'll have to do that periodically to keep it smooth. if you keep up on it, you should be able to prevent pot holes.
 
   / pot holes #9  
GlueGuy I do my road the same way. The only way to get rid of potholes that I've found is that way. If you just fill them in the fill never meshes with the existing road and the holes just come back. Like you said though if you rip it up and then regrade and compact it they don't come back.

18-35034-TRACTO~1.GIF
 

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