15 BIGGEST Machines of Mankind

  • 3 months ago
Get ready to be amazed by these 15 mind-blowing printed creations that will leave you in awe! From intricate designs to jaw-dropping details, this compilation showcases the limitless possibilities of the modern MACHINE! Watch how technology and creativity collide to produce stunning works of art that defy imagination. Whether you're a tech enthusiast, art lover, or simply curious about printed creations, this video is sure to spark your interest. Don't miss out on witnessing these incredible pieces that push the boundaries of what a MACHINE can achieve. Prepare to witness the future of innovation unfolding before your eyes!
Transcript
00:00Mankind has harnessed the power of machinery to fulfill the many needs of our society.
00:05Today, we're taking a look at the Top 15 Most Massive Machines Mankind Has Ever Created.
00:13Number 15. Bellahaz 75710
00:17If you're running a construction project or planning on moving large quantities of material from one place to another,
00:22then you're going to need a hauling truck.
00:24But if you have substantial loads that need to be transported,
00:27then you might just require the use of the largest one ever designed, the Bellahaz 75710.
00:33Created by the Belarusian company Bellahaz, it's the highest payload capacity haul truck available.
00:39The vehicle itself weighs 500 tons and can carry a further 500 tons of material.
00:45It's more than 67 feet long, 32 feet wide, and 27 feet high,
00:49and its wheelbase alone is just over 26 feet across.
00:53To power this gigantic vehicle, it uses a Siemens MMT500 drive system,
00:58which is powered by two MTU 16-cylinder four-stroke diesel engines, which each produce 2,300 horsepower.
01:05This gives the 75710 an impressive top speed of 40 miles per hour,
01:09and even when loaded on an incline of 10%, it can maintain a speed of up to 25 miles per hour.
01:17Number 14. The 500 Meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope
01:22The 500 Meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope, or FAST for short,
01:26is the largest radio telescope in the world that's made up of a fully filled-in structure.
01:31Located in Pingtung County in southwest China,
01:33it was installed in an ideally-sized natural depression within the landscape.
01:37At 1,600 feet in diameter, its surface is covered with adjustable metal panels that are controlled by computer,
01:43and the feed antenna, which is suspended above the dish by cables.
01:46It can also be adjusted depending on what's being observed.
01:50FAST took five years to build, and after opening for testing in 2016,
01:54it took a further four years to reach full operational capacity.
01:58It's able to observe wavelengths between 4 inches and 14 feet,
02:02and since entering service has now detected 44 new pulsars that were previously unknown.
02:07Not only has FAST dramatically increased research's ability to observe the distant reaches of the universe,
02:12but it also has become a visitor attraction in its own right.
02:16Ten million tourists were thought to have traveled to the remote region in 2017
02:19to get a glimpse of the enormous dish for themselves.
02:22And this has meant that those in charge of running it have had to strike a fine balance
02:26between accommodating the needs of the visitors to ensure the wider community is engaged with their aims,
02:31while also making sure they're carrying out enough studies to make the $180 million cost of the project worthwhile.
02:38Number 13. PRELUDE-FLNG
02:41Oceanic oil fields around the world are covered with large drilling platforms
02:46designed to extract as much of the valuable resource as possible.
02:49But in 2013, Shell launched the largest offshore facility to have ever been built,
02:54known as the PRELUDE-FLNG.
02:57At over 1,600 feet long, 243 feet wide, and containing more than 260,000 tons of steel,
03:04it has five times the water displacement of a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier.
03:08At an estimated cost of $13 billion, PRELUDE has a full-time crew of 240,
03:14and was specifically designed to work on the PRELUDE and CONCERTO gas fields,
03:18which lie around 120 miles off the coast of Australia.
03:21It's secured in place by 16 seabed-driven steel piles that are each 213 feet long,
03:26and this means it's able to withstand the worst weather that can be thrown at it,
03:30including a Category 5 typhoon.
03:32After initially being installed in place in 2017, PRELUDE began full operation in 2018
03:37and is able to extract 110,000 barrels per day,
03:41a mixture of liquefied natural gas, condensate, and liquefied petroleum gas.
03:45The sheer scale of this platform is almost unimaginable,
03:49but with a projected lifespan of 25 years,
03:51it'll secure production from the valuable fields for many years to come.
03:56Number 12. LA PRINCESSE
03:59In 2008, celebrations in Liverpool, England,
04:02were chosen for the unveiling of one of the largest mechanized vehicles ever made,
04:06La Princesse.
04:07It was designed by a French performance art company called La Machine,
04:10who wanted to build a giant robot spider that could walk through the streets.
04:14Constructed from steel, wood, and complex hydraulics,
04:17it took more than a year to complete, but the result was incredible.
04:21Weighing in at 37 tons, it had 50 different axes of movement,
04:25and with the aid of 16 cranes, 6 forklift trucks, 8 cherry pickers,
04:28and a crew of more than 250 people,
04:30it was able to climb up and around buildings,
04:33and crawl through the city at a speed of up to 2 miles per hour.
04:36As a part of the performance, it was also followed by a live band,
04:39and was fitted with numerous special effects,
04:41so that it was able to emit smoke, fire, rain, wind, snow, light, and sound.
04:46It's undoubtedly one of the most elaborate entertainment machines to ever be built,
04:49and one that would take incredible passion and commitment to ever aim to beat.
04:55Number 11. Tradino the Robot Dragon
04:58The German town of Fürthenwald in Bavaria is also known as the Dragon City,
05:03and they take this association very seriously.
05:06Every year, a play called Drakenstadt is performed through the streets
05:09based on a tradition that began as far back as the 16th century.
05:12It tells the story of St. George slaying a dragon.
05:15As you'd expect, the central spectacle of the play is the dragon itself,
05:19and in 2001, Organized decided that their prop was getting too old and worn,
05:23and plans were drawn up for a giant dragon robot,
05:26which would become the largest independently walking robot in the world.
05:30It took nine years to be designed and built,
05:32and took center stage during the play's performance in 2010.
05:35Known as Tradino, the dragon weighs 11 tons,
05:38and is powered by a 2-liter turbo-diesel engine.
05:41It has a 40-foot wingspan, a huge tail,
05:44and to move by remote control, it contains more than 1,000 feet of hydraulic lines,
05:48and 4,000 feet of electrical wires.
05:50For added effect, it can also carry 17.5 gallons of fake blood
05:54and 2.5 gallons of liquid gas,
05:56which allows the monstrous beast to bleed and breathe fire up to 5 feet from its mouth.
06:07Whenever you've traveled through an international airport,
06:09you'll quite often see aircraft that are much larger than you'd expect,
06:12from the Airbus A380 to large cargo transports.
06:16It almost seems impossible that they'd ever be able to lift up into the air.
06:20But even they can't stand up to the heaviest plane ever built,
06:23the Antonov An-225 Mira.
06:26Only one was built in 1985,
06:28and it was the result of the Soviet need to transport the Buran spaceplane,
06:32which was their equivalent of the space shuttle.
06:34To carry the spacecraft to the launch center,
06:36the Mira needed some serious stability and power.
06:39So the 276-foot-long and 60-foot-tall aircraft,
06:42with a 290-foot wingspan,
06:44was fitted with six Progress D-18T turbofans,
06:47which could each generate 229.5 kilonewtons of thrust.
06:52This means that it can take off with a maximum weight of almost 1.5 million pounds
06:57and attain a cruising speed of up to 500 miles per hour.
07:01Following the end of the Soviet shuttle program,
07:03the Mira was mothballed for eight years,
07:05but new uses soon emerged for the megajet.
07:08It's still regularly used to this day for projects
07:10ranging from delivering supplies to relief organizations around the world
07:14and to carry the largest pieces of air cargo,
07:17such as wind turbine blades,
07:19and the heaviest light generators for power plants.
07:27The Lusatian Coalfields in Germany are a series of mines
07:30on the country's border with Poland
07:32that produce some of the largest quantities of coal in the world.
07:35Having been in operation for more than half a century,
07:37the operators needed some heavy-duty machinery to keep running at full capacity,
07:41which led to the development of the Overburden Conveyor Bridge F-60.
07:45Five of these monster machines were built,
07:48and they're responsible for removing and transporting the overburden,
07:51which lies over the coal seam, out of the way.
07:53They're fitted with excavators on each side,
07:55which can remove almost 30,000 tons of material every hour
07:59and have nine conveyor belts to load onto their trucks for disposal.
08:03Each one has a cutting height of 200 feet,
08:06and the vehicles themselves are 260 feet long, 790 feet wide,
08:10and 1,647 feet long,
08:13making them by far the longest and largest vehicles ever constructed,
08:17as well as one of the heaviest with an operating weight of 13,600 tons.
08:22To put this into perspective,
08:24an F-60 is longer than the Empire State Building is tall,
08:28which represents a phenomenal feat of engineering.
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08:43Number 8. SeaWise Giant
08:46The SeaWise Giant first set sail in 1979
08:49and to this day remains the largest ship to have ever been built.
08:52It was designed for use as a supertanker,
08:55and at 1,504 feet long was so big that it was unable to traverse the English Channel,
08:59the Suez Canal, or the Panama Canal.
09:02When fully loaded, the displacement was more than 650,000 tons,
09:06and the bottom of the hull would submerge up to 81 feet beneath the water's surface.
09:10Building such a large vessel didn't come without its problems, though,
09:13and initially the SeaWise Giant suffered from vibrations that were such a concern
09:17that the company that had commissioned it refused delivery.
09:20Following a refit, it performed closer to how it was meant to
09:23and had 46 tanks for crude oil
09:25and an enormous 230-ton rudder and a 50-ton propeller.
09:29This allowed it to reach a top speed of 16.5 knots,
09:32which is the equivalent to 19 miles per hour,
09:35but had a turning circle of 2 miles
09:37and needed 5.5 miles to come to a full stop from that speed.
09:41Throughout its operational life, the ship changed hands a number of times
09:45and was even sunk during the Iran-Iraq War in 1988.
09:48After being salvaged and fixed, it continued in service
09:51and was finally scrapped in 2010
09:53when smaller but faster vessels proved to be far more economical.
10:00Ports around the world are dealing with bigger ships and larger loads,
10:03so have to keep up with technology to be able to service them.
10:06At the Yantai Raffle Shipyard in Yantai, China,
10:09the largest crane in the world was built to not only handle cargo,
10:12but to assist with the construction of the supercruisers of the future.
10:16Known as the Taisun Crane,
10:18it's rated to handle loads of up to 20,000 tons
10:21and holds the record for the three heaviest lifts by a crane of all time.
10:25It was originally designed to install modules on top of ship hulls
10:28that had been built elsewhere
10:30and soon became the go-to place for anyone wanting to build a giant tanker.
10:34At 393 feet wide and 436 feet tall,
10:37it's able to service even the most complicated of needs
10:40with a 262 foot lift height.
10:47The Schwerer Gustav was possibly the most frightening weapon ever developed.
10:50It holds the record for being the largest caliber rifled weapon ever deployed in combat
10:55and the heaviest mobile artillery machine ever constructed.
10:58It was to be the Nazis' war-turning weapon
11:01and was just a turn of fortune that meant it wasn't possible for them to use as often as they would have hoped.
11:06Weighing 1,490 tons, it was transported on the back of a train car
11:11and was able to fire 7.7 ton shells to a distance of up to 29 miles.
11:17It was 155 feet long with a barrel length of 106 feet
11:21and took a crew of 250 people three days to set up once it was in position.
11:26Fourteen 31-inch rounds could be fired per day
11:29with a muzzle velocity of up to 2,700 feet per second
11:32and anything that stood in its way was obliterated.
11:35The only time it was used effectively, however,
11:38was during the Battle of Sevastopol against the Soviet Union.
11:41And during this mission, the Gustav successfully destroyed a munitions depot
11:45that was hidden 98 feet beneath ground level.
11:48The weapon was eventually destroyed by German troops before the end of the Second World War
11:52to prevent it from falling into Russian hands.
11:55Luckily, no one has ever felt the need to recreate such a weapon since.
12:05The Komatsu D-575A is the largest bulldozer in production
12:09and it's so powerful that it's the preferred piece of machinery
12:12at surface mines across the U.S., Canada, and Australia.
12:16At 38 feet and 5 inches long and 16 feet tall,
12:20it's able to move as much as 125 cubic yards of material on each pass
12:24and can dig to a depth of up to 7 feet.
12:27To do this, the 168-ton vehicle is powered by a 12-cylinder four-stroke diesel engine
12:32that can produce 1,150 horsepower.
12:34And it's so big that it can't simply drive itself to a new worksite.
12:38It has to be dismantled and transported on up to eight trucks
12:41before being reassembled at the other end.
12:48The German military devoted huge resources towards developing powerful weapons
12:52and had a particular interest in creating the biggest war machines ever invented.
12:56This led to the creation of the Panzer VIII Maus,
12:59which remains the largest fully enclosed armored fighting vehicle ever conceived.
13:04Only one full Maus was ever completed
13:06and it never entered service because it was captured by the Soviets before it was operational.
13:10But had they ever made it to the battlefields, they would have been almost unstoppable.
13:14At 33 feet and 6 inches long, 12 feet and 2 inches wide,
13:18and just under 12 feet tall,
13:20the 207-ton vehicle required a six-man crew to operate,
13:24which included a commander, a gunner, two loaders, a driver, and a radio operator.
13:29It could reach a top speed of 14 miles per hour over virtually any terrain.
13:34But because it was so heavy, it wasn't able to use bridges
13:37and instead had to cross rivers
13:39and was equipped with a snorkel so it could submerge to depths of up to 26 feet.
13:43The Maus was intended as a breakthrough tank,
13:45which could have punched holes in enemy defenses without taking much damage itself
13:49and almost certainly would have changed the face of the war
13:52if it had ever properly entered service.
13:58To understand and unlock the strangest mysteries of the universe
14:02requires not only a deep knowledge of physics,
14:04but also the equipment that enables the necessary experiments to take place.
14:08That was the reason behind the construction of the Large Hadron Collider,
14:12which enables scientists to confirm the existence of an elusive particle called the Higgs boson.
14:17Simply put, the LHC is a particle collider
14:20that is used to accelerate particles to astonishing speeds,
14:23and at its maximum output can shoot protons around its 17-mile tunnel
14:28The tunnel etches 6.8 mph slower than the speed of light.
14:32The tunnel is lined with electromagnets to control this process,
14:35which make it by far the largest machine ever built and one of the most productive.
14:40Since opening in 2010, the seven detectors have achieved all they've set out to do, and more.
14:45And now plans are in motion to replace it with an even bigger collider
14:48that can further the answers of the questions that have been raised
14:51as a result of what the LHC has found.
14:58The Alaskan Way Viaduct is a crucial transport artery through Seattle,
15:02but following the 2001 Nisqually earthquake,
15:05it became clear that the double-decker freeway posed a safety hazard.
15:08Plans were put in place to build a replacement,
15:10but rather than constructing a new road above ground,
15:13the decision was made to carve a huge tunnel under downtown Seattle
15:17to connect the southern part of the city to the north.
15:19This result was the State Route 99 tunnel,
15:22which is two miles long and is double-decked,
15:24and is capable of accommodating the 110,000 vehicles
15:27that use the original viaduct each day and more.
15:30The problem that the designers had to overcome with the construction of the tunnel, however,
15:34was that there wasn't a machine on Earth big enough to do what they needed.
15:37Part of the project, therefore, involved designing a new tunnel borer,
15:41which became known as Bertha and was the most massive one ever built.
15:45The 6,700-ton machine had a cutterhead diameter of 57.5 feet and was 326 feet long,
15:52At a cost of $80 million, it had to be built at specialist factories in Japan
15:57before being shipped to Seattle in 41 parts and constructed at the entrance to the planned tunnel.
16:02It began work in July of 2013, and despite encountering several delays,
16:06it completed its job by April of 2017.
16:09As there was no further use for Bertha, however,
16:12the machine was dismantled at the end of the route,
16:14and only a few of the parts are still in existence,
16:17and are now at display at a local transportation museum
16:20as a record of the huge effort it took to create the tunnel that millions of people rely upon each year.
16:30First launched in 1998, the International Space Station isn't the largest machine or vehicle ever built,
16:36but it's definitely one of the most impressive things ever designed by humankind,
16:40and has set plenty of records of its own.
16:43It's actually the ninth of the 11 space stations that have entered Earth's orbit,
16:47but is by far the biggest of them all.
16:49With a modular design, extra pieces have regularly been sent up to attach to it,
16:54and currently it's 239.4 feet long and 357.5 feet wide.
17:00It was built and is run as an international collaboration
17:03between most of the nations on Earth that are involved in space exploration,
17:07and is an important tool for scientific research for both studies of the effects of microgravity
17:11and of understanding the wider universe.
17:14Due to its position in orbit, the most impressive record that the ISS holds
17:18is that it's the fastest moving vehicle that any human has set foot inside.
17:22It circles the Earth once every 92.68 minutes,
17:26which means it's traveling at an astonishing 17,100 miles per hour.
17:31Even if it was possible to reach this speed at ground level,
17:34you'd be able to travel from New York to Sydney, Australia in just 35 minutes.
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