My driveway is the width of a 2x4 thick and I've taken my bobtail empty onto my property every time I go home since I started driving big trucks. It cracked it in a few small spots but it was already cracking. I would say like 5" minimum. Even less with some good rebar in it.
Parking at home
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by JustinKline, Oct 13, 2023.
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I have a gravel drive, I had parked here a fully loaded truck in the drive a few times with no issues, even with heavy rain.
Here is what I used. It worked, it was all put in, in two days and had not ever given me any issues for the past 7 years.
AgTec Geocell Ground Grid 8 Inch, 8.4ft x 27.4ft – Heavy Duty Cellular Confinement, Truck Parking, Building Reinforcement, Gravel Driveway, Road Paver
Follow the instructions.Siinman and blairandgretchen Thank this. -
Siinman, Ruthless and gentleroger Thank this.
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Some of y'all have never worked in excavation and it shows lol.
1st off, who cares about the neighbors wants/desires unless he's footing the bill.
The name of the game in building a good aggregate driveway and parking area is compaction. I'll say that again...compaction.
4" of road base after compaction (100% rate) then use 3/4-1" of septic rock. This is large enough to keep it out of your tires and will lock in once driven on. Small gravl is trash for driveways. -
People need to learn modern construction materials. 4" of modern 8000 PSI concrete is stronger than 6" of 4000 PSI concrete for example. And 8000 is by far not the strongest concrete around.
Point being, thickness doesn't matter as much as the concrete rating.Siinman, Bud A., rollin coal and 2 others Thank this. -
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Scrape off any vegetation/dirt spoils.
Put road fabric down - well worth the money if you have bad soil. (Around here it's less than a dollar a lineal foot).
Put down a bigger crushed rock like a 3"-. This will pack really well and make a good parking area.
Down the road if you want to dial it in top it with 3/4"-.
Plus, if you do it this way, you can have it paved or concrete poured in the future with minimal sub grade work.
And as far as concrete, my shop has a 5" concrete slab and has held up great, but I put a lot compacted crushed rock beneath it.
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