3 Horse Ranch
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2017
- Messages
- 1,194
- Location
- Tonasket, WA
- Tractor
- NH B50H Cab, Ford 1715, Poulan Pro 46
Hello all,
This is a wonderful forum, and this is my first post. [everyone claps] Thank you, thank you.
We are the proud owners of a Mahindra 1538 HST, and we love the dickens out of it. It's still a relative newborn, but it's been running wild like a toddler and it will soon be coming home like a pre-teen covered in mud just a little late for supper.
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My question:
We live in the Pacific Northwest, western WA. We need to fix/upgrade our gravel driveway and I just wanted to see if I'm on the right track. I've been reading lots of information here and elsewhere. We seem to have a pretty solid base of 12" or so of crushed rock, but only maybe 1 1/4" minus with 5/8" minus on top. It's getting fairly mushy and holy, so I plan to scrape off any muck and lay down new layers of rock. For long-term solidity, should I do 3" of 1 1/4" minus? Or just go straight to 5/8" minus? Do I need to get even more drastic? Lastly, in general, should the subbase, or actually subgrade, be graded to level with surrounding area to prevent bathtub? Or can the subbase be a little below grade so long as the top courses are nicely graded to shed water?
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First let me say welcome to TBN.
I used to work for a gravel company (14 years) in Bellingham so I know a little bit about gravel. As others have recommended that your driveway needs to be above surrounding grade and crowned to shed water. You mentioned 1 1/4 minus for your driveway which is a good relatively inexpensive choice. However not all 1 1/4 minus is equal. It is basically whatever comes out of the ground and crushed. Sometimes the pit operator will throw in some cobbles that were previously screened out from washing aggregate to bring the rock content into spec. It usually will pack pretty hard but I have seen some with a high sand content that never packed hard. This is often referred to as crushed gravel (often called 'base course" or CSBC). Another kind of 1 1/4 minus is crushed rock, most often from a quarry rather than a gravel pit. We had two types of crushed rock, the cheaper was a basaltic rock, the mo re expensive was limestone. Both of the crushed quarry rocks packed hard with the limestone packing the hardest and looking the best, but both are more expensive than 1 1/4 base course. I don't know too much about what is available where you are, but we hauled quite a few tons of material from pits and a quarry in Granite Falls to the new Lakewood High School in Smokey Point about 4 miles west of Arlington airport (about 40 miles r/t). I think your best bet would be to give a local gravel company a call and talk about what you need in yardage and what you want to do. Most gravel dispatchers want to sell you that product that will best suit your needs and they will know costs and the quality of the products they sell (or haul).You could get the driveway built up with base course, compact it and use it for a month or so and then order in some 3/4 or 5/8s clear crushed rock as a 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 inch top dressing. Clear crushed lets water flow through it, but never compacts. As long as everyone is easy on the throttle and brakes it looks good and slows the start of weeds.
Or if money is no object, pave it.
Just some thoughts
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