Drive ramp principles - Any special rules for constructing ramp

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markactive
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Location: leicester

Post: # 104679Post markactive

Hello, I am going to construct a ramp up to a platform level with the grass in my back garden . The main fabric will be between 4 to 6 inches of aggregateand 70mm thick granite slabs laid on a full mortar bed. Are there any specific rules to follow when constructing a drive ramp i.e. a partition restraint at the bottom of the ramp to prevent long term sliding ?
Many thanks.

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 104690Post lutonlagerlout

the main thing is to make sure a car can get up it without grounding
if the grass to floor level is 200mm your ramp needs to be around2 m long
I did post a calculator for this last year
lemme see if I can find it
LLL
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Ouch
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Post: # 104709Post Ouch

Sensible worst case ground clearance for a car is 100mm.
So if you've got a wheelbase of 2.7m (VW Passat) which has been loaded with half a ton of paving slabs (who'd do that??) then as you crest the ramp you'd need either a gradient of less than 13:1 (half of 2700/100) or a rounded transition from ramp to flat - a quick cad sketch suggests a radius of 9.1m or greater for transition.
Technically it's called a 'breakover angle' according to wikipedia..
You might also want to radius the approach (bottom) gradient in a similar way to prevent the damage to the underside of the front bumper/skirt.

Tony McC
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Post: # 104725Post Tony McC

A few years back, Cookie and meself had to build a ramp for a Ford GT65 with a ground clearance measured in millimetres. The access apron from the public highway sloped out to the road, while the driveway itself sloped back to the house, forming a 'peak' at the boundary.

We had permission from the local highways to re-pave the apron to match that on the driveway, but the 'hump' that had existed for 80-odd years without causing a problem had to be drastically reduced when the client arrived home one afternoon with his latest acquisition, a show-off car which turned out to be incapable of crossing the threshold without grinding down the ludicrous spoiler on the front.....and there was no way of getting a barrow in the back of it, so not a practical vehicle at all!

Without digging out my notes from back then, it was summat daft like a maximum rise of 75mm over 3 metres
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lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 104731Post lutonlagerlout

we have actually looked up car specifications worked out the clearance and the distance wheel to wheel and made a profile up allowing for minimum 75mm clearance (vehicles can be heavily loaded)
but bottom line every site is different but dont get it wrong
LLL
"what,you want paying today??"

YOUR TEXT GOES HERE

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