โJun-26-2022 03:09 PM
โJun-30-2022 12:17 PM
โJun-30-2022 11:33 AM
riltri wrote:
I found a landscaper who says he has extended several culverts. This should be the least expensive soluton. Thanks for all the suggestions!!
โJun-30-2022 10:06 AM
โJun-29-2022 07:38 AM
bucky wrote:
It's a private road in rural eastern NC. Nobody will care as long as drainage is not compromised.
โJun-29-2022 06:20 AM
bucky wrote:
It's a private road in rural eastern NC. Nobody will care as long as drainage is not compromised.
โJun-29-2022 04:55 AM
โJun-29-2022 03:32 AM
โJun-28-2022 06:45 AM
valhalla360 wrote:riltri wrote:
The steel idea is a good one!! I was a GC for many years and have seen properly supported steel used often for heavy construction equipment. It is often used in road construction with 18 wheelers running over it. Only issue is the weight and putting it in place.
If you have a front end loader capable of lifting it and the steel plate, that's an option.
A 10ftx10ftx1inch plate will weigh around 2 tons.
How wide is the ditch? The spans allowed by plating are typically pretty small when traffic is allowed to run on them.
PS: If construction disrupting traffic is the issue, you could get a piece of culvert and a load or two of stone and extend the existing culvert without closing the road. Just work from the yard side. Your truck should be able to carry the culvert and a load or two of gravel to fill around the culvert. I'm betting an afternoon and your done with no impact on the road.
โJun-28-2022 05:55 AM
riltri wrote:
The steel idea is a good one!! I was a GC for many years and have seen properly supported steel used often for heavy construction equipment. It is often used in road construction with 18 wheelers running over it. Only issue is the weight and putting it in place.
โJun-27-2022 03:07 PM
riltri wrote:
Thanks for the suggestions and even the criticism....I'm married, I can handle it!!
Backing is not an option due to other obstacles.
This is a private road. Not certain how the other 8 residents would feel about having their only egress blocked for half of a day eventhough the end results would be an improvement for all. It is a poor rural area, so getting help on the cost is not likely. I checked with a grading company. They said it is not a very long process to get county approval. But said $4-8K...he would need to look at it.
I think that pulling partially in then backing a couple of times might cut the turn radius down enough.
The steel idea is a good one!! I was a GC for many years and have seen properly supported steel used often for heavy construction equipment. It is often used in road construction with 18 wheelers running over it. Only issue is the weight and putting it in place.
Thanks again!
โJun-27-2022 01:00 PM
โJun-27-2022 12:56 PM
Sjm9911 wrote:
Is it your driveway? Just span it with a steel plate? Obviously suport that plate.
โJun-27-2022 12:44 PM
โJun-27-2022 10:05 AM
cummins2014 wrote:Gooma wrote:
No desire to extend the culvert, but willing to chance damage to truck or RV using a temporary bridge?
Nothing here helps the OP , they didnโt ask for criticism.
Extending the drive seems the best solution.