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Smooth Drum vs Padfoot Roller: Which Roller Should You Hire?

Compare roller types for granular material, clay, cohesive soil and layer works.

Quick answer
  • Smooth Drum Roller: better for the first set of applications below.
  • Padfoot Roller: better for heavier, different or more specialised requirements.
  • Final selection depends on site conditions, hours, access and availability.
Best choice summary: Use a smooth drum roller for granular material, gravel, crushed stone and final layers. Use a padfoot roller for clay and cohesive soils where kneading action is needed to compact deeper into the layer.

Choose Smooth Drum Roller when

  • Granular fill and crushed stone
  • Road layers and final trim
  • Base and sub-base preparation
  • When a smoother finish is required

View Smooth Drum Roller →

Choose Padfoot Roller when

  • Clay and cohesive soils
  • Thicker fill layers
  • Earth dams and embankments
  • When kneading compaction is required

View Padfoot Roller →

Smooth Drum Roller vs Padfoot Roller comparison table

FactorSmooth Drum RollerPadfoot Roller
Best materialGranularCohesive/clay
Drum surfaceSmoothPadfoot/sheepsfoot
Compaction actionVibration and static pressureKneading plus pressure
FinishSmootherRougher

How to decide on site

The right plant hire choice is not based only on machine size. A lower-cost machine can become expensive if it slows production, but an oversized machine can also waste money through higher transport, fuel and hourly rates. The best decision comes from matching the machine to the work, access, material, haul distance and required daily output.

Check the work type first

Start with the actual task: digging, loading, pushing, compacting, lifting, hauling, crushing or screening. Then look at material type, depth, reach, production target and the machines that will work alongside it.

Match the fleet, not only the machine

For larger projects, the supporting fleet matters. Excavators must match ADT or tipper capacity, loaders must match stockpile and truck requirements, rollers must match material type, and lowbeds must match the transport weight and dimensions.

Think about mobilisation

Transport costs, loading space, permits, site access and project duration can change the best option. A bigger machine may be worth it on long production work, while a smaller machine can be better for short jobs, urban work or restricted sites.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Choosing the cheapest hourly rate without considering production.
  • Hiring a machine that is too large for access roads or loading areas.
  • Forgetting transport and mobilisation requirements.
  • Pairing machines that do not match each other’s capacity.
  • Using the wrong machine for material type or ground conditions.

Related equipment and pages

Use these pages to compare hire options and request the correct machine for your project.

Frequently asked questions

Which option is cheaper?

The cheaper hourly rate is not always the cheaper project cost. The better option is the machine that completes the work efficiently without unnecessary transport, downtime or production delays.

Can Project Plant Hire help me choose?

Yes. Send the project location, work type, material, estimated hours and site restrictions and we can help recommend a suitable machine class.

Should I choose wet hire or dry hire?

Wet hire is often better where operator skill, productivity and machine care matter. Dry hire may suit clients with experienced operators and clear machine management processes.

Need help choosing the right machine?

Send us the project type, material, location, estimated hours and site conditions. We’ll help match the correct plant hire option.

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