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[email protected] June 22nd 16 03:01 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 
I have a local plant that will send me a ton of hot mix for 55.00. My idea is to load it in my trailer and bring it home to repair some potholes, cracks and other areas in my driveway.

My idea is to cut these bad areas out, install new asphalt and hand tamp. I will have to trailer it on my dual axle trailer about 17 miles. My trailer has sides, but no top. Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?

Stormin Mormon[_10_] June 22nd 16 03:18 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 
On 6/22/2016 10:01 AM, wrote:
I have a local plant that will send me a ton of hot mix for 55.00. My idea is to load it in my trailer and bring it home to repair some potholes, cracks and other areas in my driveway.

My idea is to cut these bad areas out, install new asphalt and hand tamp. I will have to trailer it on my dual axle trailer about 17 miles. My trailer has sides, but no top. Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?


I'd try a tarp and bungees.

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Ed Pawlowski June 22nd 16 03:24 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 
On 6/22/2016 10:01 AM, wrote:
I have a local plant that will send me a ton of hot mix for 55.00. My idea is to load it in my trailer and bring it home to repair some potholes, cracks and other areas in my driveway.

My idea is to cut these bad areas out, install new asphalt and hand tamp. I will have to trailer it on my dual axle trailer about 17 miles. My trailer has sides, but no top. Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?


I'd put a tarp, but the half hour should not be a problem. I know of a
paving company that would work on Sunday when busy. They would load up
a couple of trucks on Saturday afternoon. Seemed to work for them.

trader_4 June 22nd 16 03:35 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 
On Wednesday, June 22, 2016 at 10:25:00 AM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On 6/22/2016 10:01 AM, wrote:
I have a local plant that will send me a ton of hot mix for 55.00. My idea is to load it in my trailer and bring it home to repair some potholes, cracks and other areas in my driveway.

My idea is to cut these bad areas out, install new asphalt and hand tamp. I will have to trailer it on my dual axle trailer about 17 miles. My trailer has sides, but no top. Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?


I'd put a tarp, but the half hour should not be a problem. I know of a
paving company that would work on Sunday when busy. They would load up
a couple of trucks on Saturday afternoon. Seemed to work for them.


+1

That kind of timeframe is typical.

bob haller June 22nd 16 03:35 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 


I'd put a tarp, but the half hour should not be a problem. I know of a
paving company that would work on Sunday when busy. They would load up
a couple of trucks on Saturday afternoon. Seemed to work for them.


small load will cool much faster, and hand tamp will not be enough, at least rent a wacker and get a couple helpers, to minimize cooling. and speed the job.

of course do all prep work in advance


Mike Duffy[_5_] June 22nd 16 03:47 PM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 
On Wed, 22 Jun 2016 07:01:50 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

My trailer has sides, but no top.
Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?


(I never tried any of this; it's an inspired guess.)

Cut a piece of plywood the size of the trailer floor. Cut pieces of
insulation to fit the floor. Cut a square board into cubes. Cut cubes out
of the insulation bats and insert the wood cubes. (For example, if the
insulation is 2", you need a 2x2 board cut into 2x2x2 cubes.)

The spacing & arial density of the cubes depends on the plywood thickness.
I estimate that 1/2 inch plywood supported every foot should be enough to
support a foot or two of ashphalt thickness. (i.e., in this case, you
should make holes in the insulation and place a cube in a grid of size 1
foot x 1 foot.)

Glue insulation onto the sides, front, rear of the trailer. Cover with
plastic film and duct tape to seal off airflow. Us water-based glue for
easy clean-up.

Cover the load with rags, cover those with plastic sheeting, and duct tape
everything airtight. You might want a team to do this last part, because
you will be on the clock as soon as the hot mix is loaded.

Good luck. Please get back to us to let us know how it worked. I suggest
you avoid duct taping directly onto the metal of the trailer because the
heat might cause the glue in the tape to melt. Similarly, use fiberglass
vs. styrofoam insulation.

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dangerous dan June 23rd 16 02:16 AM

hot melt asphalt and driveway
 


wrote:
I have a local plant that will send me a ton of hot mix for 55.00. My idea is to load it in my trailer and bring it home to repair some potholes, cracks and other areas in my driveway.
My idea is to cut these bad areas out, install new asphalt and hand tamp. I will have to trailer it on my dual axle trailer about 17 miles. My trailer has sides, but no top. Any idea on how I could keep the mixture from cooling too much?


For prices like that I think I'll check around for some paving work on my property.




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