Street roller on yard??

Not to be argumentative. But blades and grass don't work. Unless you take all of thr vegetation off and dont want it spread back out. Cutting the humps off and filling the lows sounds good. But it will not work with vegetation.

His tiller idea is the best bet

Suppose it really depends on how much brush we are talking about. It isnt all that hard to separate it outta the dirt as you go though.
 
Suppose it really depends on how much brush we are talking about. It isnt all that hard to separate it outta the dirt as you go though.
How many yards of dirt have you moved to come to that conclusion? You just dont jump on a blade and do it there are plenty of blade drivers and very few blade operators
 
Everybody I've ever talked to says that rolling your yard is terrible. It compacts the soil and hinders grass growth. However, I live close to Amish and they mostly still use the push reel type mower. Because it's extremely difficult to get a reel mower to mow grass nicely if it's bumpy, almost all the Amish in this area will roll their yards in the spring. They do it while the ground is still soft, you don't want it dried out and obviously not too muddy. They have some of the nicest looking grass and the smoothest yards around. My theory is the yard guys don't want to roll it because of risk or liability? They'd rather tell you to aerate and fill but in my experience, rolling actually does a better job.
 
By "roller" do you mean smooth drum? That might help if you first used a sheeps foot (some call it goats foot; see pic below) roller to help compact the soil where it's overly bumpy, but you'd need to perfectly time it when soil is mildly soft yet not too soft. Probably just using a grader would be the better option.
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I suppose it depends on what you call smooth. When I think of yard smooth I am thinking a baseball or football field. Where you can ride a lawn mower and it be smooth. Then there is small tractor with brush hog smooth. Two total different things. I have ran machinery for a lot years and done some work on football and baseball fields. That dirt is SMOOTH. Your aren't doing that with vegetation and a blade. If you just after small tractor smooth then a lot of the ideas mentioned above will work.
 
It might not be realistic with that much space, but I’ve seen some videos of leveling lawns with sand and spreading it around. It seemed like these were real turf junkies though. Maybe there’s something more large scale? I mow about two acres and I understand the bumping and jumping, even with the minimal suspension on a Ferris mower. I think a roller would help with the small stuff jarring your kidneys loose, and I think now is the time of year to do it before it drys out and gets hard.
 
We have sandy loam (loamy sand) around here. I've never had luck trying to till or disc existing ground and move dirt around. Bring in more dirt and move it around with one of these. The grass grows right back. I use this after a blade too.

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Rolling can definitely help if the bumps/ruts aren’t too big. Go multiple different directions when the ground is wet/soft but not muddy wet. Aerating before rolling will help improve the results as well.
If the ruts and bumps are just too big/deep your best to just bite the bullet and till it up and start over, but 4 acres is a pretty large area to be doing that.
I’m a golf course superintendent btw
 
Find a roller that you can hook up to a mower and feel it with water. Like the walk behind rollers. A construction roller will most likely be to heavy and cause to much compaction, especially if you hit the vibe. And could actually make more dips due to the unevenness of the lawn.

Are you trying to get a lawn you mow about 2in in height? If so, id suggest starting from scratch. If not, id take some time and work on the spots at a time, being in some dirt and slowly fill in the unevenness over time. But it is 4 acres. So you may need to decided on what you're true end goal is.

If I had 4 acres to maintain id be buying a wheel mower and making it into 4 acres of Kentucky Blue cut about a 1/2in tall.
 
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