I read the past topic on lawn rollers, but my intended use is not for rolling over grass. I need a roller for a 1/4 mile long driveway. I plan to pull it with a Cub so I put this on the Cub forum. This is at my place in Wisconsin which I have closed up until next spring, but I want to get a roller by next April and might find an end of the season sale so I figured I’d start looking now.
What I have is a neglected driveway that hadn’t had gravel added for almost 20 years. This fall I had 5 loads of gravel spread which covered about 1/2 of the length of the driveway. It is the type of gravel that consists of small rocks, sand and some clay and is supposed to repel and shed rain once it is compressed.
Unless it can be fabricated very easily I’m probably looking at buying the roller. I have found there are basically 2 types of rollers that you fill with water. Poly and steel. Poly costs about 60% of the cost of a steel roller. They weigh in the 500-1000 LB range full of water depending on the size. I read the reviews and it’s sounds like most function fine but may have some fixable design flaws.
I have found at least 2 that are manufactured in USA which are Brinly and Ohio Steel. Other brands are Fimco and Agri-Fab but I haven’t researched them. They are typically special order items at places like Home Depot or Menards and not in the store to look at.
Ideally I would like a 5’ wide roller that I could take up and down one time to roll 1/2 of the width of the gravel on the way down and 1/2 on the way back up.
I realize I can call the manufacturers and ask questions but mainly I wanted to ask if anyone has used one of these store bought rollers to compress gravel. My concern is whether the poly is will hold up on gravel. I read it is about the thickness of a 5 gallon pail. The steel rollers are more durable but eventually rust out because it’s impossible to drain 100% of the water. For one I read the steel is 14 gauge.
Also, other than volume to add water for weight, I’m not sure if a 5’ wide X 24” diameter would be better than an 5’ wide X 18” diameter roller.
From what I have read the Cub should be able to handle a 1000 LB roller. The driveway has a steady (guessing 20 degree) incline.
I’m just looking for any comments or opinions on what might work for this application, whether you have owned one or not.
Thanks
What I have is a neglected driveway that hadn’t had gravel added for almost 20 years. This fall I had 5 loads of gravel spread which covered about 1/2 of the length of the driveway. It is the type of gravel that consists of small rocks, sand and some clay and is supposed to repel and shed rain once it is compressed.
Unless it can be fabricated very easily I’m probably looking at buying the roller. I have found there are basically 2 types of rollers that you fill with water. Poly and steel. Poly costs about 60% of the cost of a steel roller. They weigh in the 500-1000 LB range full of water depending on the size. I read the reviews and it’s sounds like most function fine but may have some fixable design flaws.
I have found at least 2 that are manufactured in USA which are Brinly and Ohio Steel. Other brands are Fimco and Agri-Fab but I haven’t researched them. They are typically special order items at places like Home Depot or Menards and not in the store to look at.
Ideally I would like a 5’ wide roller that I could take up and down one time to roll 1/2 of the width of the gravel on the way down and 1/2 on the way back up.
I realize I can call the manufacturers and ask questions but mainly I wanted to ask if anyone has used one of these store bought rollers to compress gravel. My concern is whether the poly is will hold up on gravel. I read it is about the thickness of a 5 gallon pail. The steel rollers are more durable but eventually rust out because it’s impossible to drain 100% of the water. For one I read the steel is 14 gauge.
Also, other than volume to add water for weight, I’m not sure if a 5’ wide X 24” diameter would be better than an 5’ wide X 18” diameter roller.
From what I have read the Cub should be able to handle a 1000 LB roller. The driveway has a steady (guessing 20 degree) incline.
I’m just looking for any comments or opinions on what might work for this application, whether you have owned one or not.
Thanks

