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On 6/3/05, Rush <jdrush@enter.net> wrote:
> 
> The best gravel roads are made in layers. The largest stone first then
> layer progressively smaller sizes and compact each layer. Put a lot of
> tailings (the grit that is washed from the other stone, cheaper than
> dirt) as the last layer before your top stones and work them into the
> gaps of the gravel and it will set up almost like hard pavement. 8-12
> inches should stand up to whatever load a pickup can deliver.
>
Depending on what the subsoil is, it may be necessary to compact the
subsoil so that the gravel doesn't sink into it.  Worst case requires
importing a suitable subsoil base before the gravel.  I'd also
investigate what people build gravel driveways out of in your area. 
If there's a suitable local material, it'll be cheaper than limestone.
 Unless, of course, limestone is the suitable local material... 
Trucking rocks isn't cheap.
-- 
David Scheidt
dmscheidt@gmail.com
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