Jeff,
Welcome to TBN!
The "mistake" I made with putting in my driveway was in one area, maybe 200 feet long that went through heavy woods. The fabric is a PITFanny to lay down with rocks and sticks on the ground. So I tried to clear out the rocks and sticks. But since I was in the woods the deeper I went the more sticks, roots and rocks I found. All I ended up doing was building a nice ditch in which my driveway was going to sit. Now I only went down and inch or two before I figured out I was wasting my time and making things worse but with only a couple inches of gravel there ain't much keeping the water off the road.
I have ditched up hill of the driveway which has diverted quite a bit of water but in the previously mentioned section I still get overwash. Not a thing I can do since its in woods EXCEPT to add more gravel which would keep the water from getting on the road. I have used a hoe to place little bumps in the gravel to divert the water.
I prefer to NOT have the dump truck drive on the fabric but it has been done without any problems. At least as long as the ground is dry. The only problem I have with fabric is that you have to be real careful with the FEL or blade when spreading the gravel. You hit that fabric and you will pull it up out of the gravel Not fun trying to rebury the fabric. But I have never made a big mess out of it even when I did hit it. Just enough to be a pain.
Also if you do grade after it is down then you have to be real careful about not hitting the fabric. But I have only had to regrade the one problem area that is kinda steep. If I had NOT put in fabric that one area would be a trenched up mess from the water runoff.
I used a mesh version of fabric that was 12 or 12.5 feet wide. It was on a roll 320 or 360 feet long. Real easy to unroll. And I was doing it my self so I had to man handle the roll around to line things up. And I have bad back. I would put down rocks and such to hold the fabric in place in case the wind came up. But other than that its not too bad to do.
Seems like when I put in the first section of driveway the stuff was $300 per roll but that was in 2002-2003. Last year I put in the second section of driveway and seems like the price was 360ish a roll. I always figured $1 a linear foot. Or $1 for 12 square feet.
With the clay we have its either as hard as concrete or if wet, a goo. That fabric really helps this time of year when it is wet. The ABC gravel, road base, here in NC, is like concrete after it is put down. My rear tires on the truck might move the gravel if I'm not careful but the cars don't bother it at all. The truck rips up trenchs in the 67 gravel parking area that does not have fines.
Just ran some quick numbers. I think the last truck I ran cost me $65 an hour and could bring in 15 tons or about 5 yards of ABC. The ABC was something like $12 a ton so about $90 per load. Total of $155 per 5 yards.
5 yards covers 21 feet by 12 feet in a six inch layer at $7.38 per linear foot or 12 sq. feet.
5 yards in a four inch layer is 31 feet by 12 feet at $5 per linear foot or 12 sq feet.
I saved $1 per linear foot by putting down $1 worth of fabric. Actually I saved more since I know darn well that I have hundreds of feet of driveway that does not have 4 inches of gravel. Its a lot less. So I saved something like $500 for the first section of driveway and another $200ish for the second phase. I never looked at the money side of fabric vs gravel though.
But I did not put in the fabric to save money on gravel. I put it in so I would not have more work to do on the driveway. I have to maintain 1800 feet of gravel road as it is and I don't need to add another 700 feet to the equation.
It might not make money sense if labor costs are high but then I don't think I really spent that much time putting down the fabric.
I put in all of this detail to give others a price point of comparison. Might help someone.
Later,
Dan