1) How thick is the gravel? Depending on the grading/Local Authority Having Jurisdiction, I assume a 30% - 40% voids volume. Once thes voids fill, the additional rainfall either percolates or runs off, depending on the underlaying soil & ammount of rainfall.
2) As CGV writes, compaction kills percolation. (Also as times goes on, fines will collect in the gravel and start to plug the underlaying soil.)
3) Consider adjusting your initial abstraction volume (inches of rainfall) based upon your gravel depth + your underlaying soil. While 4" of gravel & 20" of gravel, both present a gravel surface for your CN, the initial abstraction is very different.
4) You may adjust you underlaying soil CN based upon available soil storage above the seasonal high ground water. There is a correlation between depth to the SHGW and soil type. You can always get a NRCS soil technician to verify the on-site soils.
5) Infiltration rate is not directly related to soils type. We have many B/D soils with nice, >6"/hr DRI percolation rates but when the water table rises or mounding occurs, the percolation rate is dramatically reduced. I recently had a project with a 12"/hour DRI percolation test and a <0.12"/hr infiltration rate when groundwater mounding occurs.
6) Consider modeling the gravel as a shallow pond. Run a groundwater mounding analysis to see how it will percolate.
Streets and roads:
A B C D
Paved; curbs and storm drains (excluding right-of-way)
98 98 98 98
Paved; open ditches (including right-of-way)
83 89 92 93
Gravel (including right-of-way)
76 85 89 91
Dirt (including right-of-way)
72 82 87 89
Clifford H Laubstein
FL PE 58662