год спустя я отвечаю на ваш пост. обратите внимание на соединение грузовиков. оно не простое. это шарнир на гидроцилиндрах. когда грузовик застревает, он имеет возможность извиваться как змея, распирая края ямы гусеницами.
What do you call when something that beastly gets stuck?? Iron Giant? xD Probably just roll up with 2-3 more and make a train in all seriousness lol. A train of those would eat any terrain
It's not challenging situations, it's a daily like for many of Russians. In really challenging situation we don't have a time to take pictures usually.
Oh their not stuck, um no no. Their just um... Resting. Yeah that's it, they are just taking a break and resting up a little bit before they just drive out of that mud. Yep they are totally not stuck. lol
I think these r not trucks , but vehicles with tracks , where trucks r run with tires , these machines run with tracks, used in tanks and construction machinery. Do u think any Russian truck could pass these Muds/gravels with tires? 😂😂
Russians are so cool, I'm American born and raised and always admired Russian engineering and resolve. Such a huge country too, and I have known sum with a great sense of humor!
unfortunately, our engineering has low "wow-effect'". It looks brutal, but little bit ugly. So, it's our style :) When you see horrible huge mechanism, moving RIGHT THROUGH the environment, it's russian. We don't like to steer, we must move.
The most of vehicles in this video are designed in Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau in Ukraine and produced on the Malyshev Factory in Ukraine by ukrainians. Glory to Ukraine
@@AntonMelegov Is Malyshev, Morozov ukrainian surname? And I heard that Kharkov is a russian city in Ukraine? At least Kharkov mechanical engineering was built by the Russian Empire and USSR
That last one is not stuck, he's parked. Had a vaguely similar experience a few years ago with my Inter Mark 5. Parked it for 3mths, let things dry out a bit, THEN drove it out. I'd love a track kit for the back wheels. As the Germans found out, there's nothing like springtime Russian mud.
please stop hating on them, here they're just innocently helping each other, defying physics, and threatening to tear a hole in the space time continuum.
I remember I once saw some jeeps like a jeep wrangler Suzuki jimny and some others VS a Lada 4x4. That thing was the cheapest and best. It towed the others when they got stuck. Russians purely has the best off road cars/trucks
That's why every Lada Niva 4x4 driver dreams to buy Land Cruiser :) Sorry, not "every" of course, some dreams of MB Gelendvagen. )) Current Lada 4x4 is manufactured with minor changes 44 yrs, interior recently updated and latest 2021 Niva Legend inside looks not like a car from 80s anymore... more like from end of 90s )))
@@lonebird7534 я русский. Всю жизнь живу в России. Могу сказать что вы абсолютно правы, т.к. многие владельцы Нивы почти никогда не катаются по бездорожью, а в остальное время Нива доставляет только головную боль.
@@Utubesux Ironically, your not talking about actual permafrost in this case, your talking about marshland that freezes once a year. Permafrost, stays frozen, hence the name. It's as hard as concrete. In the more southern regions, thanks to global warming, when it does actually thaw out, it takes three to five years.
Watching the activity at 7:27, I'm amazed at the way the riders on the trailer and the fella standing up on the front of the vehicle. They act as if they don't have a care in the world, they must be accustomed to that type of transportation. Their vehicles are "Bullet-Proof", lol! Tough as nails, vehicles, and operators.
Comments on here are funny and I love reading them. Russians deal with the toughest climate in the word and endure every day. Gotta admire them for surviving.
Extraordinary! I'd have been nervous tackling some of that terrain in a hovercraft or a helicopter, never mind a tracked vehicle! It must take a while to learn the right moment to ease off and when you should plough on regardless...
It would be interesting to combine submarine-technik and swimming-technic, already spread in busses like at port of Rotterdam with these vehicles. The integration of a sensoring to sensor the ground would be helpful to know before in what kind of ground you drive.
Some of vehicles in video above costs like a new S-Klasse Mercedes. Machine you dreaming about will be EU or USA made and cost like a several dozens of new S-Klasse Mercedeses. Not Russian way of doing things at most of our vast country (but sometimes you may see CAT machines here and there in more habitated and developed areas).
@The Weapon Collection Uhu... how about 30 years? you do realize that Eastern Europe is littered with Soviet-era trucks that are still widely used today despite many being nearly 50 years old which kind of tells a different tale to what you're suggesting, not to mention that the modern truck market in places like Russia and Belarus is reasonably healthy and growing with popular designs coming out regularly.
Amazing vehicle.thought it was done there for a second. Never seen these attic vehicles used in this way. I'm realy impressed. But in the end. It got stuck in a river of mud 10 ft deep. But it's surrounded by equipment. Im convinced that there is no vehicle that can't get stuck in the earth's terrain. I look for the challenge of any video. seen T-90's stuck in less. Including M1A1 stuck in less then the T-90.
when the second vehicle came out of the water my first thought was wow that is a complicated tow hitch. then i realized they were drive shafts to power the rear tracks... that is an impressive vehicle
The big ones here in the video are called "Vityaz DT-30", originally buildt for the soviet military as heavy carriers of .... stuff. Y'know, food, fuel & ammunition, stuff like that.
I've got some swampland in Siberia to sell you...I presume that part of the bog problem here is that the ground several feet down remains frozen year round leaving the water nowhere to go.
I would love to buy property in Russia from you, and can guarantee my Overlander or even my Hägglunds or my skidders I use to log with the massive swamp float tires on it would go through that like a walk in the park.
Excellent work guys! This is pure gold in it's purest form .9999! The way this work of art came full circle at the end was a plethora of cinematic genius! The ups the downs... Just, an amazing piece! Keep up the excellent work and absolutely can not wait until the next adventure!
Витязь это монстр бездорожья, работал в молодости не долго на этом заводе где их производили, да и сейчас производят, если бы не развал 91 года, может так и работал бы там.
After owning a track bobcat for 6 years. I only managed to get stuck twice. Once I got myself out of the muck. The second time required a friend with a backhoe to pull me out. That last guy is in the same predicament I was when I needed help. Time to call in backup from those big excavators. Which would take the rest of the day to get unmired from that bog.
@@maksim1856 Chernobyl was not caused by the CIA...it was cheap ass russian contractors doing things on the cheap....knowing they were not the ones who would pay...exactly the same kind of philosophy that caused deaths on the US shuttles. Shoddy workmanship and nothing else...no conspiracy..it's just sad that good people died because of it.
@@gopher1471 It actually wasn't cheap construction. It's already been investigated in minute details and the reason for the explosion is this... Dumb ass scientists in Moscow wanted to run experiment and ordered against the warnings of local scientists at the station. The rest is history. So it's not CIA and not construction techniques. It's moronic management in Moscow.
@@rahulpagariya1 ambientalist cucks will say you are destroying the ecosistem of swamp cratures. the goverment will only let you drive on specific limited places. cuckanada
In the first clip, if they would hook the chain shorter it would lift the item they are pulling so it wouldn’t get the build up in front of it and would pull easier
If the world continues to go to Shite. I am either going to move to Russia or Poland. Old school talent, thinking and work ethic abounds there. Hello from the USA.