We were trying to finish grade the slopes along a new highway when the 650H slid down the slope into the canal and the 750J tried to pull him out, an also fell in. Good thing we had the 345CL there to rip them both out.
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John, good observation, but I would like to point out 2 things. 1, the grouser height on that excavator is pretty low, so the damage to the road is minimal. 2, the operator knows it's not the best practice to drive on the road, and that is why he intentionally did not rotate the tracks at all.
Guy in the 345 is a hero in my eyes. Give him mad props! That second truck was in so deep I thought there was no way... I thought he was gonna be burried alive for sure. An uplifting video in all senses of the term.
not at all, mud/clayey soils arent dozed. u gotta use a big bucket shovel to excavate them and move. though the soil here was not mud, but water banking made it so. also it was a loose soil, probably an uncompacted fill or dump, so the dozers had no traction which made it worse.
Time to send those 2 operators of those dozers to driving school. You never, never leave a machine like that in a ravine, guess what, shiit happens and always prepare for it.
We had a 245 on site in North Gadsden building a cell site that last week there I got to run it and I had a blast .. that 345 is a SERIOUS machine ....
What a crazy idea to run the dozers on that slope in the first place - all bank work could (and should) have been done from the hardtop using the digger. From the look of the ground it looks like a good storm would wash the banks away - how long before the whole road ends up in the drainage canal???
Notice how the baby calves patiently waits for their mother to free them from being mired. And note the joyful freedom as they totter away, once again under their own power.
I did not realize that excavators were so strong. It pulls the dozers like they were made of paper. Very cool. And the way he gently did it was a very skilled operator. I'm impressed!
Seems weird seeing this while the traffic goes past. If this was in the UK.. Firstly, as the dozers worked there'd have been 5 miles of cones along the road and a 40 limit with average speed cameras. Then to retrieve them, a site set up with a 2mph speed limit, full PPE required to enter, a risk assessment every hour, dangly orange flags off every electricity wire or phone line within 2km, then before any rescue could take place a 3 month wait while the RSPCA try and catch any endangered reptiles in buckets along a specially setup plastic fence by the water.
lol, leaving in the UK I can so much relate to this :) +Seaside Seanster, I'm French and have lived around the EU (and UK) for a while, and trust me, the UK Health and Safety are by far the craziest (and probably the best).
That guy running the 345 is a real pro. One wrong move on the controls and he would have done some serious damage to the dozers he was pulling out. Nice job, fella!
Interesting video! All three guys did a great job in salvaging the dozers not just the excavator operator. He did a great job too but from a more comfortable position: high and dry and with apparently much more power in his machine. I always wonder why people continue working under these circumstances of mud and steep ramps.You may be killed if the dozer doesn't just slide into the mud but tumbles down.
I was afraid the second dozer was going to roll over, the angle on it was so steep, scared the crap out of me. No escaping if it had. Much respect to all of those operators!
most people do not realize what it takes to be a good operator. this guy in the excavator showed everyone what it really means. a lot of boredom a lot of talent, a lot of talent
+tackless Yeah, I used to service these in a past life. I admire anyone who can use one of these efficiently and safely. You could really tear something up but good if you don't know what you're doing.
I use to run heavy equipment . I wonder what possessed these two geniuses to take a dozer in those conditions. I could look at that and know I would get stuck with dozer
*When the chain (Breaks)* Yeah I know. I've seen some vids how they break and what they can do. But if you use them in a "sencable" way it might work in some occasions.
I don't know much about heavy equipment, but it looked like the guy operating the second Deere wasn't helping very much with his machine,,, the excavator was pulling him with the tracks Sliding,,, That must be one Powerful son of a gun,,, Thanks for the Video,,, I really enjoyed it !!!
I have a life long friend that I went to school with when we lived in the Country, and at that time that biggest Farm Tractor was a 5020, OMG he took me to the dealership a while back and the 8620 could fit that 5020 in it's glove box LOL,,, Nothing Runs Like a Deere,,, My friend has been a JD Salesman for nearly 30 years now,,, Thanks for your video !!!