05-10-2021, 12:48 PM
This is an addition to the ongoing threads I have about resurfacing a private drive I live on. I am wanting to use asphalt millings to resurface the drive. It has been dirt and stone for the past 15 years but now needs something more. I put millings on my driveway and smoothed them out with my tractor and rented a small roller. I mostly use a snow blower and it is just a driveway. It has held up well for about 10 years now and I have no need to do anything else to it. The private drive is going to get more traffic and will be plowed in the winter. I am needing to sell this proposal to the other people that use the drive. They want to pave but that will make it narrower and required routine sealing. I have not heard of anyone doing "maintenance" to millings? Is that just because if you used millings you were not that concerned about looks? Why doesn't it crack and break up live asphalt pavement? Also what do you do when it starts to show wear and tear and needs resurfacing?
I am needing a contractor to deliver, spread, and roll the millings. Are paving contractors the best source for that or are there others I should look for? We need it about 15'-16' wide which is between the pavers machine of 13' or 17+'. I am thinking someone with a dozer to push it around then roll.
I have also heard of what might be called 'raw' millings that can have large pieces in it. That is what I have on my driveway and it doesn't lay that smooth. I have also heard of millings that have been remilled so it is a finer material. I rented a small 2 ton roller when I put my drive in and it had a hard time compacting the larger pieces. I am assuming a contractor putting in a drive about 600' long and 16' wide would use something bigger than a 2 ton roller.
I am needing a contractor to deliver, spread, and roll the millings. Are paving contractors the best source for that or are there others I should look for? We need it about 15'-16' wide which is between the pavers machine of 13' or 17+'. I am thinking someone with a dozer to push it around then roll.
I have also heard of what might be called 'raw' millings that can have large pieces in it. That is what I have on my driveway and it doesn't lay that smooth. I have also heard of millings that have been remilled so it is a finer material. I rented a small 2 ton roller when I put my drive in and it had a hard time compacting the larger pieces. I am assuming a contractor putting in a drive about 600' long and 16' wide would use something bigger than a 2 ton roller.