Machine
I always love watching you and your machine at work it’s funny after sitting in your machine for hours when something out of the ordinary happens like the earthquake you can feel that something isn’t right so you stop and check your machine not because of something you see but because it doesn’t feel right The sign of a great operator.The trucks must shake a lot when you unload the grabber.
There's a reason why in Australia they say if it's flooded forget it.. underwater obstacles & damaged roads are real..As someone who has pulled all sorts of trailers with all sorts of trucks in ice, snow, mud, gravel, etc., that tractor was crazy impressive. A trailer is such an anchor.As a farmer in the uk im not going to ram my tractor into a deep ford and potenital risk damaging it and the equipment on the back as i love my tractor and dont want to destroy it by unnecesarly damaging it.
Maybe I’m getting old, but it’s kind of sad to see a house torn down. Someone, somewhere made good memories in that house.Absolutely fascinating to watch. How the operator knows what to do efficiently is beyond me. This also makes me aware of the fragility of our homes.That house theyre tearing down looks better than the house I live in.That Catepillar reminds me of one of the large dinasors in Jurasic Park. God help us all!
Growing up as a kid in a small farming town in the Missouri Bootheel, I remember seeing a 2 row corn header on a International Harvester. Oliver Tractors, plowing fields. John Deere "Popping Johns" and I will never forget seeing the 1st 2 row cotton picker. How farming has modernized has always fascinated me and that little cotton top boy still lives within me today at almost 60 years old I still stop and watch farm equipment today with fascination
I remember seeing this as a kid thinking this guy was a complete psycho who just did this for no reason because they never fully explain the context. Once you actually find out how this guy's life was unfairly ruined by the city, you start to understand his rage.Marvin definitely let the intrusive thoughts win. But after hearing his story I not only sympathize, I completely understand. Every man has his limit, and we as a society have pushing people's limits past their breaking point.
Watching this video, I'm impressed with myself. I was sixteen, in Spring of 1970. Completely by hand, I dug and chopped out a very large maple stump about half the size of yours for my elderly neighbor, Mrs. Johnson. It took me three days. I wanted to prove that I could do it. I shoveled under each root, and using an axe and a bow saw, I chopped out each root. The whole time, Mrs. Johnson complained about digging out a root in her lily bed, and that it was taking far too long. I'm not sure she was appreciating the enormity of the task. Every neighbor from the surrounding neighborhood, and member of my family (three siblings and both parents) came over to offer doubts and negativity. So I had too finish the job. I just wish I had the before-and-after pictures of my insanity.
Great video! Hey I am familiar with the Ha-Go here at the Oregon Military Museum. They are taking special safety precautions during their restoration efforts because the inside of the turret is normally equipped with an ASBESTOS heat shield blanket all over the inner surface of the turret. Hopefully that has been removed already on your tank, however, be on the lookout for it! Just in case it is still there. Wet removal methods within a containment bag work best to remove that stuff. Good luck in your resto! Jerry
As a heavy equipment mechanic, after watching Cody go over all the grease tubes and filters.... dude knows his shit.Cody clearly knows how to operate that machinery. You can see him rotating in both directions so the top doesn't unscrew all the way. Very important! Good work!I can watch this channel for hours straight. Imagine this guy having a TV channel with real sponsors like myth busters.
I've done this type of work all of my life and now i'm 71 and can only watch it on YOU TUBE but i still love it and truly do miss it , The dozer work that is. I’m glad they showed full crossing with fill to other shore ! Usually they end the fill short of full crossing to other shore, there must be compensation for the total capacity of the sea or river that is lost due to landfilling of the sea or river, namely by making new ditches or dredging the river in accordance with the amount of capacity lost as a result of the stockpiling earlier, this must be done so that there is a natural balance
Always wear your safety harness and seatbelt. Pipeliner dozer operators grade hills steeper in WV. Done properly, another dozer hooks to the front one with a winch and wire rope at the top of the hill. I'm pretty sure he did exactly what he intended. Pushed that rock loose and didn't damage anything. The excavator Op. Didn't seem concerned enough to hook onto him. I have been in something similar and I dropped the blade and the single shank ripper and went on down. No way in hell id jump, my luck id outrun the tractor and het hit.