Chủ Nhật, 29 tháng 4, 2018

Youtube daily vehicle Apr 29 2018

Most Insanely Overloaded Vehicles Ever

For more infomation >> Most Insanely Overloaded Vehicles Ever | Last One is Hilarious - Duration: 4:24.

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Odd Island - Vehicle Simulator - Duration: 6:09.

There's the island

Goodbye

Where's the water?

Oh

AAH

Ow

Myplaneno

.-.

oOf

There's nothing here

What the heck is that?

Donteatme

D:

There's a plane

Where'd it go?

Ah crap

R u n

What is it?

It's coming after me

Ah it's night

This island is abandoned

Maybe I could climb up there

I think it's gone

Ow

Wait-

It's back agAin

#OilRigLivesMatter

I think I'll be able to fly off this island

Carefulofholes

Come on come on come on

Aak tree hazard

Not again

D:

HeRe iT cOmEs

Nu dOn'T AtTaCc mE

AAH

I'll hide from it?

._.

Nopenopenopenopenope

It's going into the plane?

Nope it's following mE

Let's try this again

Here we gO

Finally

Goodbye creepy cloud

._.

For more infomation >> Odd Island - Vehicle Simulator - Duration: 6:09.

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Tsar Tank: The World's Strangest Combat Vehicle - Duration: 6:42.

People have always admired enormous constructions:

grandiose structures made by ingenious engineers.

In the 19th century,

the world saw buildings that still capture us to this day.

World's Strangest Combat Vehicles

Gigantic architectural buildings continue to conquer the world.

So what about tanks?

Did engineers create anything so big it still strikes us with wonder?

Historian Yuriy Bahurin knows exactly just how big

combat vehiclescould have become and why this didn't happen.

The concept of this vehicle

occurred to Soviet engineer Nikolay Lebedenko

at the beginning of World War I.

The idea was to create

a powerful combat vehicle that would be able

to break the enemy front line using its cyclopean size.

In January 1915, the design of this wonder vehicle

landed on the desk of Russian Emperor Nikolai II.

And the previously unknown engineer Nikolay Lebedenko

brought the Emperor

a mechanical miniature of a combat vehicle.

The emperor was fascinated by the miniature

and later officially authorized

the construction of the soon-to-be TsarTank.

Tsar Tank

Lebedenko's Tsar Tank

was also known as Netopyr, a genus of bat.

It was a rare instance of bypassing all the red tape

and heading straight to the decision-maker.

It's a generally known fact: the Emperor and the engineer

cheerfully played with the mechanical toy,

running it on the floor, watching it

surmount improvised obstacles made of piles of books.

After that, they parted as best friends.

The engineer was given a hefty sum of money

— an absolutely incredible amount, even for the time.

Under the auspices of the Emperor, the work on the project went swiftly.

The extraordinary machine was made of metal,

and from the late spring of 1915, it had been assembled secretly

near the Orudievo village in the Dmitrovsky district.

The vehicle was manufactured entirely in Russia,

so the project received careful attention.

It was shrouded in profound secrecy.

The production details were distributed across various plants.

The parts were ordered

under the guise of battleship or heavy industry parts.

The tank was designed to have a top speed of 17 km/h (10.6 mph).

To set the vehicle in motion,

the engineers used the engine from a destroyed German Zeppelin.

The engine moved gigantic spoked wheels

that spanned nine meters in diameter.

The rear roller was significantly smaller,

about 1.5 meters (4.9 feet).

The upper stationary was nearly eight meters

above ground level.

The T-shaped hull was 12 meters (39.4 feet) wide.

An interesting fact

was that Lebedenko intended his combat vehicle

to only be equipped with machine-guns.

However, they were mounted

quite efficiently, allowing for all-round fire.

Another set of guns, positioned on the underside of the tank,

made covering fire possible.

The Tsar Tank was built within the shortest possible time.

This was probably due to the enormous budget

allocated for the project by the Emperor himself.

On August 27, 1915,

the finished vehicle was run through mechanical tests.

Tsar Tank

So here we are: the engines are running,

the Tsar Tank takes off, successfully breaks

a young birch tree with one of its wheels,

and keeps moving confidently on a corduroy road

— a road made of tree trunks laid across a swamp.

However, the moment it goes off the corduroy road

and onto boggy ground, the vehicle becomes hopelessly stuck.

The rear roller and the tank's tail, weighing almost 40 tons

of the vehicle's total weight, get bogged down in the ground.

The tank was skidding hopelessly,

and, as far as is known, the attempts to retrieve it failed.

The Tsar Tank's main flaw was its construction,

which later led to failure in its trial runs.

The fault lay with the irrational distribution of weight,

with the vehicle's highest weight being placed at its tail.

See for yourself: the Tsar Tank reached

as much as 9 meters (29.5 feet) at its highest point.

This is the combined height

of four T-34 tanks of World War II.

By the time mechanical test runs were over,

the Russian Empire was already going

through various internal discords, feuds, and complications.

Then, after some time, the February Revolution happened.

Followed by the October Revolution.

Naturally, the tank was no longer on the agenda.

Incidentally,this is exactly what later allowed

some conspiracists to advance a theory

that all of this was, in fact,

the doing of the British intelligence service

who, while ostensibly helping the Russian government,

actually wanted to weaken it by building the tank.

As a matter of fact, one can say that if Lebedenko's Tank

had been manufactured in substantial quantities,

and if imperial Russia had managed

to set up the production of at least a hundred of these vehicles,

while maintainingthe appropriate level of overall secrecy,

these vehicles would have probably produced

the same effect that British vehicles had on Germans at the time.

Because, all things considered,

the Tsar Tank had the potential to do that.

The Tsar Tank project was extremely exotic,

even by the standards of World War I,

with its revolutions in military art and technology.

During that time, many vehicle projects,

up to hundreds of meters in height, were conceived.

However, the Tsar Tank has remained the biggest combat vehicle in history

that was successfully forged in metal and tested.

The Tsar Tank is undoubtedly a landmark of that era,

a monument to the designer's ambitions.

It's an absolutely unique engineering artifact,

unequalled anywhere in the world.

This is, perhaps, a combat vehicle with the most unusual appearance

that has ever been designed throughout history.

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