Yep, the closest competing tech made here in the states is uses wet cutting belts with diamond teeth, they run faster than the chainsaws but have their drawbacks too.
The Egyptians used sand, ropes and toothless copper saw blades and sand to cut stone. They also used water soaked wooden wedges to split stone blocks off of quarry faces and to make smaller blocks from large ones, or so I've read.
I probably melted over a million pounds of shredded cars in my lifetime. It is the cheapest recycled material used for remelt in making steel available. In the industry it is known as 1010. And yes, the alloy known as 1080 is the same thing, but with .80% carbon included, and of course other elements such as Mn and Si are controlled for castability.
Damn I need #9. Clear cedar out of the pastures...
ReplyDelete#5 - Pedo/Groomer processing facility.
Cedars are death to apple trees. Some sort of rust spreaders, they are.
Delete#6 - is that chain cutting dry? Wow!
ReplyDeleteYep, the closest competing tech made here in the states is uses wet cutting belts with diamond teeth, they run faster than the chainsaws but have their drawbacks too.
DeleteSome serious hardware
ReplyDeleteThese machines all have their place in DC
ReplyDeleteHow fast can the woodchipper on a crane (#9) move once they start running?
Delete#2 looks like yet another version of a Ditch Witch.
ReplyDeleteTurn the fking wheel around, throw that stuff away from you, might make it alright.
Deletech
#8 is ancient Egyptian technology
ReplyDeleteoops, meant #6 not #8
ReplyDeleteThe Egyptians used sand, ropes and toothless copper saw blades and sand to cut stone. They also used water soaked wooden wedges to split stone blocks off of quarry faces and to make smaller blocks from large ones, or so I've read.
DeleteNemo
I probably melted over a million pounds of shredded cars in my lifetime. It is the cheapest recycled material used for remelt in making steel available. In the industry it is known as 1010. And yes, the alloy known as 1080 is the same thing, but with .80% carbon included, and of course other elements such as Mn and Si are controlled for castability.
ReplyDeleteNumber 3 reminds me that time I did my GF
ReplyDelete@LuisIBangedHerHard
Number 9 Reminds me when my GF trimmed her bush.
ReplyDelete@LuisCan'tSeeWhat'sThere
Where is my dozer?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAMrwL_VKT8