Skip to main content

Road Widener makes curbside backfilling easy

The Curb Backfiller accessory, from Road Widener, extends to the left or right of the FH-R and precisely dispenses material over the curb to backfill with dirt, aggregate and even asphalt.
By David Arminas January 12, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The Curb Backfiller accessory keeps new curbs intact with a protective wheel that prevents the accessory from scraping against the curb (image courtesy of Road Widener)

Road Widener, a US manufacturer of road and utility construction equipment, has developed its Curb Backfiller accessory for the company’s FH-R material placement attachment.

The accessory extends to the left or right of the FH-R and precisely dispenses material over the curb to backfill with dirt or aggregate.

Paired with the FH-R, the Curb Backfiller boosts efficiency, accuracy and safety by replacing a backfilling method typically done manually by workers with shovels. Crew members can operate it with the original FH-R remote, improving convenience and reducing the number of needed labourers to just one.

“We recognise the tremendous labour shortage our customers are facing and it’s taking a toll on their ability to complete work,” said Jeremy Dehnel, Road Widener’s director of sales. “We have always sought to design solutions to limit labour and increase safety. “The Curb Backfiller accessory accelerates project timelines, increases safety and cuts out unnecessary steps in the backfilling process.”

The Curb Backfiller easily attaches to the FH-R and can fill on the right hand side by default, or the left, with dual configuration. It provides a cleaner, more accurate process by backfilling curbs and keeping debris off the roadway, eliminating the need for street sweepers. Contractors can accomplish more with their host machine without having to haul in additional, heavy equipment.

The Curb Backfiller excels in applications such as residential developments with new curb and parking lots with green space requiring backfill.

The accessory keeps new curbs intact with a protective wheel that prevents the accessory from scraping against the curb. This not only ensures a better backfill, but also a longer curb life.

Meanwhile, Road Widener’s FH-R material placement attachment gives you ultimate versatility in a compact package. Take on road shoulder repairs, remediation, road widening, trench backfilling and even asphalt and aggregates placement. It is available in single- and dual-discharge configurations and in 30-183cm laydown widths and can dispense around 18 tonnes in under 10 minutes.

For versatility, the FH-R is brand agnostic; works with virtually any brand of loader, skid steer, compact track loader, wheel loader and road grader. It is towable by pickup truck on any common width trailer and is compact enough to fit on a trailer with its host machine.

Road Widener was founded by two road construction professionals in the US around 30 years ago.

Related Content

  • Eradicating work zone danger
    June 26, 2013
    New safety systems for highway work zones are helping to reduce deaths and injuries in the United States, while much work is being done in Europe to improve work zone safety. Guy Woodford reports. With more road building underway than at any one time in Texas history, the US Lone Star state’s Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is introducing its first highway safety system with queue-warning technology and temporary rumble strips to cut work zone collisions. Debuting along a central Texas stretch of the
  • GPS machine control speeds dangerous road improvement
    April 11, 2012
    A Canadian contractor has carried out major roadworks to improve safety on a dangerous stretch of road, using technology to complete the work smoothly. Wiltech Developments, located in West Kelowna, British Columbia, has a great deal of experience. In the contracting sector. The firm works in most. of British Columbia and currently owns more than 40 pieces of heavy machinery, with the majority of these units featuring Trimble Grade Control equipment, a move that has improved its operations.
  • Making a base
    July 20, 2012
    Soil stabilisation offers a cost effective solution for road construction in the right conditions Ensuring the soil underneath the aggregate base of a road has been stabilised with cement, lime or fly-ash can provide a greater working life and a reduced risk of problems that can arise as the road ages, such as subsidence. The technology works particularly well in ground with high clay content and where there are local shortages of stone for use in aggregates. Reducing the need for aggregates where they are
  • J-Tech’s LaneBlade clears the way
    February 28, 2022
    The hydraulically operated LaneBlade is mounted on the front of service vehicles meaning rescue personnel are safe from dangerously venturing onto live lanes or having to ‘look-and-leap’ for gaps in traffic.