The benefit of the grader/scraper compared to simply dragging some random item is that it pushes the material to the center. If you wanted to simply drag a bar, I”d just make sure that it has an angle to it to have the same effect.
Whats the make and model of that rear blade? It looks heavy duty and very adjustable, does the blade tilt also?I also have a gravel driveway and the above posters gave me the same advice. The driveway has a significant elevation drop and suffered from ruts created by heavy rains.
I used the box blade to move material so I had a pitch to one side. The rain will run off the side now, not straight down the fall line. I then used the back blade to clean things up and help move some (now loose) material. Worked out great for me.
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It's an EA Xtreme duty blade - it does tilt. I have been very pleased with itWhats the make and model of that rear blade? It looks heavy duty and very adjustable, does the blade tilt also?
That does look sweet. Much nicer than our light weight with no offset and I suspect more effective. Ours does fine with loose material but it has to be either new material or loosened up with the box blade or ripper bar before it does anything other than bounce over the top. I found it more useful than the box blade at putting the final touches on the crown for the road, but some of that could be my lack of skill with the box blade. As indicated by the relative condition of the two implements I have more experience with the backblade.
Sounds like your baseball size rocks might give you a decent base to start with if you have enough of them.I live in the mountains of western NC. My driveway is gravel (rocks) and has grass taking over part of it. The driveway I want to add is on a sloped section of my upper field and is currently just grass but my subsoil is basically clay/dirt mixed with A LOT of baseball sized rocks.
Tom - no expert on stone types/terminology.
We have a decent grade down to the road too.
Years ago, water would run down it and wash the topping off.
I usually used #2 washed crushed stone (<2” stone size), but anything that didn’t have many fines, and was big enough to not wash away.
I’ve controlled most of the water now (fingers crossed). I can thank having a Kubota tractor for that!
My work with crusher run is the first time in 30 years I’ve tried a material like this, with fines.
This job is far from perfect. Not enough crown and I’d like to channel more water away....but still a lot better than years ago.
If you have water sheeting down the steep parts, you need to control that first before going with a finer topping. Otherwise, you get to do it again....
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Your rear blade (brand?) is a particularly nice one with simple offset capability.I also have a gravel driveway and the above posters gave me the same advice. The driveway has a significant elevation drop and suffered from ruts created by heavy rains.
I used the box blade to move material so I had a pitch to one side. The rain will run off the side now, not straight down the fall line. I then used the back blade to clean things up and help move some (now loose) material. Worked out great for me.
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"Buy ENOUGH tractor" !!!!!Hey, folks. Thanks for your advice. I’m currently facing a tough choice; whether to buy a tractor or not. I mean, I have a similar problem in my yard, so I’ll be grateful for your thoughts on it.
lol, because it is exactly similarYour rear blade (brand?) is a particularly nice one with simple offset capability.
Not all rear blades are created equally.
I have had 4 different rear blades.
Now have a "EA 6 Way Deluxe Scrape Blade" which is very similar to what you have pictured.
Sorry, missed your earlier post about your blade being EA.lol, because it is exactly similar
Depending on your soil type, might want to consider some type of geomatting material underneath. I have a section of my gravel driveway that has it, and a section that doesn't. The old part without the matting eats gravel. I'll put down 30 tons of crusher run and within 3-4 years it's sunken in and then dirt starts to show and the grass returns. The newer part with the matting is going on 8 years now and I've not had to add any to it yet.