Single disk gang to pull dirt

   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #11  
Hire a backhoe and buildup the center of the road so the water can actually run off
A road grader is actually the best equipment for pulling ditches and crowning roads. At $150/hour, a grader could probably do the job in about 3 hours. Then the OP would have a crowned ditched road that could be maintained with a tractor blade.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #12  
Consider keeping both right side gangs on the disk. Run the front straight to cut and the back angled to pull dirt onto the road. Lots of weight on the front gang to cut deeper and keep the implement from going sideways.

A plow might also be able to throw dirt sideways. Many years ago many farmers cultivated fields with what we called a tiller. They were one gang of large disks placed at an angle. One of those would be perfect for what you are doing.
 

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   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #13  
Guess it would depend on the width of the disk. If the disk is about the same width as the road, wouldn't it make sense to leave all the gangs on and tilt it to the back?

The terracing plow shown is basically how the rear gangs of a disc harrow are arranged:
 

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   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #14  
Consider keeping both right side gangs on the disk. Run the front straight to cut and the back angled to pull dirt onto the road. Lots of weight on the front gang to cut deeper and keep the implement from going sideways.

A plow might also be able to throw dirt sideways. Many years ago many farmers cultivated fields with what we called a disk. They were one gang of large disked placed at an angle. One of those would be perfect for what you are doing.
The pics show what we call a oneway meaning it can only be used in one direction (counterclockwise) around the field being worked.
They turn well to the left but not so well to the right. I agree, might work well for crowning a road as they are built heavy.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt
  • Thread Starter
#15  
These have been some good suggestions. I'll try tilting down the rear gangs on the disk this weekend and see how it goes. If I remember correctly they never wanted to dig very well when tilted back until the whole disk was lowered to the point the front engaged also. I need to check but I may be able to reduce the offset of the front gangs while keeping the back offset. This may solve that problem and still pull dirt to the middle.

I have a couple smaller old farm disks laying around I might play with. Trying to add longer braces to an old 3pt disk to look very similar to that terrace plow, but time has been a limiting factor in completing that job.

Will post back results as soon as I can test a few of these ideas.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #16  
These have been some good suggestions. I'll try tilting down the rear gangs on the disk this weekend and see how it goes. If I remember correctly they never wanted to dig very well when tilted back until the whole disk was lowered to the point the front engaged also. I need to check but I may be able to reduce the offset of the front gangs while keeping the back offset. This may solve that problem and still pull dirt to the middle.

I have a couple smaller old farm disks laying around I might play with. Trying to add longer braces to an old 3pt disk to look very similar to that terrace plow, but time has been a limiting factor in completing that job.

Will post back results as soon as I can test a few of these ideas.
You probably will notice that, when tilting the disk to the back. the outer ends of the rear gangs will contact the ground first and try to dig morethan the middle. May even hold the middle above the road surface during first passes but will still be bringing material towards the middle.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #17  
A road grader is actually the best equipment for pulling ditches and crowning roads. At $150/hour, a grader could probably do the job in about 3 hours. Then the OP would have a crowned ditched road that could be maintained with a tractor blade.
Yes a road grader might actually work pretty well, the original post stated the “roads go through a young timber stand” I wonder what that actually means ? Some pictures showing the roads and the trees might be helpful.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #18  
Yes a road grader might actually work pretty well, the original post stated the “roads go through a young timber stand” I wonder what that actually means ? Some pictures showing the roads and the trees might be helpful.
When I bought my place, the access road (1/2 mile) was rutted and eroded below the surface of the land. I hired a road grader and operator and he cut ditches then pulled the cut material onto the road, then crowned it. He did all that work in about 5 hours. After that work was done, I had gravel delivered with belly dump trucks and spread it with my tractor. Since elevating the road and adding surface gravel, the road is easy to grade with my blade and maintain.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt
  • Thread Starter
#19  
9B0D2042-6C5A-47BF-8903-7609BF824FDC.jpeg

Here’s an example of one of my “roads”. Many would consider it a shooting lane through the trees. But most of these lanes are used to access other parts of the farm and get a good bit of traffic. The part in this pic is in good shape but other parts stay wet and rutted. We built up and graveled our main access road but that’s not feasible on 7-8 miles of trails. I’m trying to solve/improve this issue with a few passes of a disk or something similar so that they can be passable again and make future yearly maintenance quicker and easier. A disk that would give them a slight crown to help shed water would be the ideal implement.
 
   / Single disk gang to pull dirt #20  
Consider keeping both right side gangs on the disk. Run the front straight to cut and the back angled to pull dirt onto the road. Lots of weight on the front gang to cut deeper and keep the implement from going sideways.

A plow might also be able to throw dirt sideways. Many years ago many farmers cultivated fields with what we called a disk. They were one gang of large disked placed at an angle. One of those would be perfect for what you are doing.
That is an old turn plow, I spent many hours on one in my youth (I am 69). Almost ever farmer in my area (Hastings, Florida) has one of those in their junk yard. Newer ones are bigger, three point hitch mounted and require a 100 hp or more tractor to pull. Here in north Florida we farm on 60 ft wide beds (18 40 inch rows with a drainage furrow plowed between the two edge rows). The turn plow is run starting in the middle of each one flipping the soil to the middle and working your way to the edge. That "crowns" the bed so water from excess rainfall can drain to the dranage furrows. A "cross drain" blade is used to cut a 12 inch or so slot across the rows.
 

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