@@jimbeam2705 Not sure a metal tracked machine would build a charge but I know rubber tired lifts will. A jackass truck driver dropped a lift for us under transmission lines. You'd get zapped trying to start the thing, luckily I carried HV gloves at the time.
@@gibbsey9579 They will dig it probably deeper than the bottom of the lever of the body of water next to it and either put sheet piles in as well as concrete or just concrete on it's own as a barrier against the lake or river whatever it is to protect the housing against flooding. I hope that makes sense.
Its many different mixtures at 1 time in landfills it would be clay and bentonite mixed to form a wall to keep leachate from getting away a geo membrane liner is used today
In relation to the depth of this "trench", this represents a large quantity of excavated materials ! Where are they ? Where are the trucks to evacuate them ?
At the end you can see a river next to some houses, and it looks like they are on a kind of embankment or dam. So I'd guess that they are putting a deep concrete core into the dam (along its length) to either recondition an older dam that's built to outdated standards (or needs some attention and fixes) or to reinforce it in order to either add more height to it (for example if flood estimates have changed) or make a narrower dam than they would otherwise need to build.
UNREAL length...... only seen long and high demo rigs NEVER this long and low 🤯🤯🤯 ah not much extra counter weight for long boom and dipper either 🤷🏼🤷🏼
I am Ibrahim from Egypt, an excavator driver. I want to work with you. I have a license to drive heavy equipment and experience in maintaining hydraulic excavators. Thank you.
Why? You know what a slurry wall is? This may prevent contaminated ground water from seeping into those homes… That or it’s going to keep these overly extravagant houses from sliding into the ocean.