Metric, imperial measurements all confused. Serious viewers know that many (most?) machines shown here are commercial failures. Costly, unreliable, crude, too complex or too simplistic for most users.
Stop clickbaiting! The motor grader you shown in the thumbnail was the giant ACCO grader built by the Umberto Acco Company in Italy. It was the largest motor grader ever built.
Sadly it was never used. They also built the world's largest dozer. I can't remember if it was the grader or dozer but one of them was scraped. I think it was the grader
Spooky Atom Your right about the grader being scrapped. I think there was plans to persevere or at least put the dozer on display. These machines were made for a huge construction project in Libya but because of the Libyan government being a brutal dictatorship with numerous crimes against humanity and evidence of sponsoring terrorism sanctions were put up against Libya effectively putting a stop to any trade, business or cooperation between Libya and U.N nations which Italy was one of.
@@LordGizmo The company that you bought the machine from has the right to fix the machine or have it fixed. your not allowed to fix your own machine If the Machine breaks. The company that you bought the machine from, run by computers and they have the computer codes. You have to pay them to fix the machine.
Ooyyyy daaa haben nocht die erste macihine damast das war inder Türkei haben Uuu Lange Lange Zeit Uber 35,yare Foverer waahhhh oyydaaa Heißt the Wanzimmm 🤧🤔😉👍🙋♂️🙋♂️
so only the last 2 qualify to be on the "top 10" list. The rest are just everyday normal use machines. Maybe you should change the title of the video to "10 graders you can buy today" as calling it the 10 worlds largest ..... is totally false !!!!!!!! Why don't you do an actual 10 worlds largest graders ???
If you need help, the list would be: 1 ACCO grader, 2. Champion 100t - also the largest ever commercially produced . 3. CAT 24h , 4 XCMG gr5505, 5. RayGO giant. 7. Brent Engineering "cat 25m" . 8. O&K g-350, 9.Gallion t700 , and finally, though not officially a grader , the Brent Engineering S18G.