Wagtail
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2013
- Messages
- 12,822
- Location
- St Helens, Tasmania, Australia
- Tractor
- JD 4105 / JD Z355E (48" deck)
Following.
It is better to ask forgiveness than permission. Put down the Calcium on the travelled portion of the road in front of your place and see who complains. Use only 1 tote the first time. It takes a considerable amount. Back in the Day, Salt Stabilization was a 'thing' and worked well. Brine from shallow oil wells was used. Corrosion factor is negligible.Hey guys, would like a few moments of your time. I'm the only person on my gravel road that gives a crap about taking care of the road, so I'm trying to set up a semi-portable system to control dust, and hopefully help keep the ground hard packed during the dry months. The weather here is comparable to the southwest states in general, from may on until october rain is extremely sparse to non-existent, humidity does hover around 60% most of the time with average daytime temps usually in the 90ーF.
A little bit of research shows that calcium chloride is probably the most well rounded and economically feasible substrate, is this true, or did I miss out on something? Is there anything I can be pointed at to read online?
I currently have (2) 300 gallon poly totes, I was going to use a few feet of 2" hose to hook up the cam and groove fittings on the bottom of those totes together. I figure a little bit of PVC fittings, pipe, and a cheap 12v pump (harbor freight?) should get me a few years of service, any recommendations on how to approach this part? I do plan on hand loading this into the bed of my 71 f6 dump body.
you don't mention how long your drive is.Hey guys, would like a few moments of your time. I'm the only person on my gravel road that gives a crap about taking care of the road, so I'm trying to set up a semi-portable system to control dust, and hopefully help keep the ground hard packed during the dry months. The weather here is comparable to the southwest states in general, from may on until october rain is extremely sparse to non-existent, humidity does hover around 60% most of the time with average daytime temps usually in the 90ーF.
A little bit of research shows that calcium chloride is probably the most well rounded and economically feasible substrate, is this true, or did I miss out on something? Is there anything I can be pointed at to read online?
I currently have (2) 300 gallon poly totes, I was going to use a few feet of 2" hose to hook up the cam and groove fittings on the bottom of those totes together. I figure a little bit of PVC fittings, pipe, and a cheap 12v pump (harbor freight?) should get me a few years of service, any recommendations on how to approach this part? I do plan on hand loading this into the bed of my 71 f6 dump body.