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Monster Machinery Update from D.R.B.



Remember our coverage of the truly monstrous bucket wheel excavator eating a bulldozer? We also wrote about Humongous Tunnel Boring Machines (nothing "boring" about these "dinosaurs") and World's Most Powerful Mobile Crane. This time at Dark Roasted Blend, we again take a look at some of the largest vehicles and machines ever constructed.

This is the largest digging machine in the world. The bucket-wheeler excavator is called Bagger 288 or Excavator 288, built by Krupp of Germany. This thing’s over 300 feet high, more than 700 feet long machine and is the largest land vehicle in the world at 13,500 tons:






The Crawler-Transporter is a tracked vehicle used to transport such enormous objects as the Saturn V rocket and the Space Shuttle. These were the largest tracked vehicles in the world until they were overtaken by the Bagger 288 excavator:








(images credit: Mischa Klement, MicroArtwork, Austria, MicroArtwork.com)


The TAKRAF RB293 is a German made giant bucket-wheel excavator. Used in mining operations in Australia, it is recognized as the largest and heaviest land vehicle:









The F60 is apparently the world's largest machine that can move. The cutting height is 60 meters, hence the name and at 502 meters long, this has been called the ‘lying Eiffel Tower’. This machinery is used in Germany for brown coal or lignite opencast mining:



(image credit: Gwilym Owen)

This gigantic machinery is used for placing enormous windmills in the North Sea:


(image credit: Tjeert. M)


This is the world’s biggest tunnel boring machine – 400 feet long, 51 feet in diameter and weighing 9.5 million pounds (left image below). The tunnel machine on the right was used to construct underground sections of the transit lines in Toronto:


(images via 1, 2)

While this one was used for transit tunnels in Seattle:


(image credit: Keith Seinfeld, KPLU)


The monstrous Liebherr T 282B is a large earth-hauling dump truck designed in Germany in 2004.
it became the biggest earth-hauling truck in the world, with the most advanced model driven by a 10.5 ton, 3650 hp, 90 liter diesel engine:


(image via)


Also by Liebherr, this extremely heavy duty hydraulic shovel is used in open pit mining:


(image via Power Step, under permission)



(image via)

This colossal machine called The Captain was built in 1965 and was the world’s largest power shovel, until it was scrapped in 1992. The bucket could hold 300 tons of material and at 28 million lbs this was the heaviest land vehicle ever built and one of the two largest land-based mobile machines ever constructed:

(image via)


The Bucyrus-Erie 1850B, built in 1962 at a cost of $6.5 million, is also known as Big Brutus, and it certainly is big. 160 feet tall and weighing 11 million lbs, the bucket could carry 150 tons of material and not surprisingly the machine had a maximum speed of just 0.22 mph. This machine isn’t the largest electric shovel ever built, but it is the largest electric shovel still in existence. Big Brutus was in operation in the sixties and seventies and is now on display at a mining museum in West Mineral, Kansas:




(images credit: Dale, 2)


The Big Bud 747 or 16-V 747 is the world’s largest farm tractor, weighing 100,000 lbs. This agricultural monster is 27 feet long, 20 feet wide and 14 feet high. It only travels at 8 mph, but is capable of cultivating 60 acres in an hour:



(images via 1, 2)


Here are some gigantic floating cranes in Japan - make sure to see our article Giant Floating Crane lifts Bridges:


(image via)


The 4200 SM surface miner developed by Wirtgen of Germany weighs over 200 tonnes, is more than 30 m long and can cut up to 3,000 tonnes of material in an hour:


(image via)


And finally, here’s the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the biggest and highest-energy particle accelerator in the world, designed to collide opposing particle beams. Constructed by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) and involving 10,000 engineers and scientists from universities and laboratories in more than 100 countries, the Collider is located underground on the France-Switzerland border near Geneva.


(images courtesy CERN, via)


For The Love Of Santa! 22 Crazy Christmas Decorations




The holiday season is about friends, family, and feeling close to one’s fellow man. This is all well and good, but it’s also an excuse to go absolutely insane with decorations. After a couple of decades living in the same house, some people build up quite a collection of decorations, until it all gets awesomely out of control.


(Images via dontcallmebecky, manolaw, sweetfineday)
The top image showcases a truly wild light show that takes place annually at a private residence. Seeing just one corner of a yard is only a hint of what else they have up their sleeve, and you can see the rest here. The middle image is from the San Antonio River Walk, a festival that celebrates with an incredible array of beautiful lights, with a lot of the high class decorating that is not always present in these set ups. In New York, this glimpse at another private residence makes one wonder how much it costs to power all those lights each year. 


(Images via gridto, forwardeverforward, sketchysantas)
In Toronto, Canada, Benjamin Boake Trail leads to one of the most intense Christmas displays in the city. For sheer luminescence, it’s a difficult one to beat. The second house looks more like the Vegas strip than a place that someone actually lives, while the final image shows a tad bit more class.


(Images via mindlessmirth, villageorigin, christmaslightsetc, dontcallmebecky)
Most homeowners stop decorating once they literally don’t have an inch of their house left to color in lights… thankfully, not everyone does. Whether the house is plastered in lights like the top left example, or the lights leak out into the lawn like the house at bottom right, it’s amazing to see the effort some people put into their setup. Going a bit simplistic is better for some folks, as the top right and bottom left images attest.

(Images via fooyoh, timnealon, tampalights, welovedc)
If someone doesn’t own a house to decorate, or just wants to bring their zest for the holidays out on the road, there’s always the option to decorate a vehicle. This pickup truck takes the cake (and probably extra car batteries) for its intense setup that covers every square inch of its body. Not to be outdone, a blue sedan takes to the night with cool blue colors lighting up the street. A more humble Beetle sits stolidly as a piece of decoration, while a chopper makes waves with lights that make it appear like it’s simply an illustration and not an actual street vehicle.

(Images via gawker, coolfwdmail, 1funny, stickyboydaily)
When it comes to decorating, more is better, right? Some people definitely think so! This top house seems to have entire scenes going on, while the inside of this person’s house in the United Kingdom is filled to the gills, with an annual display they had to shut down after the power bill became too much to handle. The bottom house looks like it’s being weighed down by the incredible number of inflatable decorations they have in place. While the final home has a good mix between luminescent decorations and good old inflatables.

(Images via rofltime, californiathroughmylens, coolfwdmail, walyou)
Intense decorations can look classy, as these homes show. Using only white lights make this house stand out, and the snow around it only serves to help the image. Giant nutcrackers stand in front of the Mission Inn during their festival of lights in Riverside California, and they do just fine without any snow to help. The bottom house wins the award for sheer number of lights, yet they manage to keep it orderly enough to not look too garish. Last but not least, a large house stands adorned in classic decorations, with a faux tree made out of strings of light to decorate the yard.

Solar Cannon











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