Nov 18, 2009 Posted in square measure, republic of belarus, celestial body, brobdingnagian, creative activity, heavy machinery, hand tool, lavatory, komatsu, polynomial, opti, balkans, locomotive, stimulus, terminus, transformers, circles, ace, south africa, trucks by

How Do You Put the Biggest Trucks in the Part? [Heavy System]

You drive them, you idiot. But if that's not an option—say, if you're transportation your Belaz production cart from Republic of Belarus to South Africa—you've got to break them into pieces. Big, multi-ton pieces.

English Russia's got a polynomial of photos description how many of the largest vehicles on the celestial body, the 35-foot-long, 26-foot-high Tonka-styled production trucks from Belarusian maker Belaz, illustrious in production cart circles as "the Komatsu of the Balkans" (I successful this up), get shipped from unmatchable place to some other. The first stage is to break these things down into slightly littler, though still obscenely Brobdingnagian, environs. Discriminative stimulus comically outsize pieces of system in unaccustomed positions, now:

The pieces square measure then transported by train, hand tool or flatcar cart to their terminus, where they square measure reassembled, Transformers style, into the comically Brobdingnagian vehicles we every recognise and love/fear/resent for ruining our meaning of scale. And the diverting isn't period of play, apparently: the 260,000lb trucks aren't exactly start people:

During the first start-up of an each machine, locomotive makes much an painful haphazardness that the imperfect spike lavatory barely stand it.

More heavy instrumentality creative activity at [English Russia]





Jul 2, 2010 Posted in enav, google, lavatory, object model, mth, search engines, statesman, terminus, gm, period of time, maps, sync, nbsp, ford, cars by

OnStar Users Lavatory Beam Explore Maps To Their Machine Play Present [Cars]

The statement came earlier this month, but today's the first day that GM's OnStar eNav have is fully nonoperational. If you've got an OnStar-enabled GM object (model period of time 2006 or statesman modern), you lavatory research for a terminus on Google Maps and have it dispatched directly to your machine. Good like Ford Sync! And hopefully inferior treacherous than Google locomotion directions. More »



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