- Location
- Grand Junction, CO
We have 3/4 of an acre behind our home that's bare land, it gets overgrown with weeds and is a fire danger & eye sore. It's not flat either, a bit bowl shaped with some high & low spots here and there. In the past I've gone back there 2-3 times a year with the riding mower and cut it, but that's very hard on the mower & blades as there are big rocks embedded in the dirt. Plus, it takes a 1/2 day to mow it, as you have to make multiple passes to cut it all down. I'm looking for a better option.
Yesterday I whipped up a 10' x 8' drag using chain link fencing, some steel pipe at the front (1 5/8 x 1/8) and loaded it down with 4 tires, a railroad tie, couple cinder blocks & a chunk of steel. It worked OK in some places, but at one point it got hung up and bent the pipe. I ended up straightening it best I could, then adding a 2nd pipe and wiring them both together to reinforce the leading & pulling edge. There were other places where it just wasn't cutting the ground enough to dig up weeds and it didn't level the ground very well in other places. I don't think it's heavy enough for my needs and after a bit of use it's already falling apart.
I have been thinking about a better design, have access to some scrap railroad rails and have 2 different plans in mind... thought I'd see what you guys think would be better.
1st idea is a straight piece of rail, 8' long and laid on it's side... the bottom of the rail would face toward the direction it's being pulled, making a cutting edge that would sit at about a 20* angle. If I use the common size rail we have available, it would weigh around 350#'s. I thought about welding railroad spikes on the edge, about every foot so it would also dig down & cut the dirt. I could run a chain or some chain link fencing behind it to smooth it all out. I should be able to flip the rail over, so the spikes are pointed up and have a smoother edge that I could drag around to finish it off. IMO the cons of this could be not enough weight, it could snag and hang up easily and I don't know how deep it would cut. Pros would be that it wouldn't take up much room far as storage goes, would be pretty easy to move (pull from one end) and it's a simple design.
2nd idea is to build a 'V', with 3 separate pieces of rail, all about the same size. I would lay the 2 leading edged on their sides as well, then the 3rd 'crossmember' piece on edge facing the direction it would be pulling. It would end up incredibly heavy, probably over 1,000#'s! Pros... the V shape should cut a bit better, not get hung up as easy, etc. Cons would be the weight, it would be very hard to turn around, storage size is big, complex construction, etc.
What do you guys think? I'm leaning towards the first idea... easier to build, smaller & simpler. I could always add a 2nd rail if I needed more weight.
Yesterday I whipped up a 10' x 8' drag using chain link fencing, some steel pipe at the front (1 5/8 x 1/8) and loaded it down with 4 tires, a railroad tie, couple cinder blocks & a chunk of steel. It worked OK in some places, but at one point it got hung up and bent the pipe. I ended up straightening it best I could, then adding a 2nd pipe and wiring them both together to reinforce the leading & pulling edge. There were other places where it just wasn't cutting the ground enough to dig up weeds and it didn't level the ground very well in other places. I don't think it's heavy enough for my needs and after a bit of use it's already falling apart.
I have been thinking about a better design, have access to some scrap railroad rails and have 2 different plans in mind... thought I'd see what you guys think would be better.
1st idea is a straight piece of rail, 8' long and laid on it's side... the bottom of the rail would face toward the direction it's being pulled, making a cutting edge that would sit at about a 20* angle. If I use the common size rail we have available, it would weigh around 350#'s. I thought about welding railroad spikes on the edge, about every foot so it would also dig down & cut the dirt. I could run a chain or some chain link fencing behind it to smooth it all out. I should be able to flip the rail over, so the spikes are pointed up and have a smoother edge that I could drag around to finish it off. IMO the cons of this could be not enough weight, it could snag and hang up easily and I don't know how deep it would cut. Pros would be that it wouldn't take up much room far as storage goes, would be pretty easy to move (pull from one end) and it's a simple design.
2nd idea is to build a 'V', with 3 separate pieces of rail, all about the same size. I would lay the 2 leading edged on their sides as well, then the 3rd 'crossmember' piece on edge facing the direction it would be pulling. It would end up incredibly heavy, probably over 1,000#'s! Pros... the V shape should cut a bit better, not get hung up as easy, etc. Cons would be the weight, it would be very hard to turn around, storage size is big, complex construction, etc.
What do you guys think? I'm leaning towards the first idea... easier to build, smaller & simpler. I could always add a 2nd rail if I needed more weight.