Nothing is "Amazing" than this for Technicals.
World's AMAZING AND TOP MACHINES-:
INTRODUCTION-:
Hello friends in this context I am going to
see you the world's top most and amazing machines . These are also the world's
largest machines . These are designed specially for special works. I hope that
these will be liked by you.
Ø
1.World's Largest Dump Truck-:
Ø With its brightly painted
guardrails and ladder, the front end
looks more like a yacht than a work machine, but the hybrid-diesel Belaz was
built for one thing; seriously moving earth. Its two sixteen-cylinder engines
get this super duty bad boy going, giving it 13,738 pounds of torque, more than the combined power of
seventeen heavy-duty pickup trucks. The company claims a fully loaded Belaz can
lug around 450 tons of dirt at 25 mph and never once cry uncle.
Ø At 800,000 pounds, the Belaz
isn’t heavy, just big- boned. Its two
turntable axles give its eight 63″ wheels a 65-foot turning radius. For a 67-foot
truck in overall length, that’s turning on a dime. The Belaz also has an
onboard tire inflation control system for keeping tire pressure in check, video
surveillance, heating and air conditioning, and sound insulation. If you can
afford the $3 million price tag and have always had an aversion to large
bodies of water, you could always set up a party area in the back and drive
your own land yacht.
Ø 2. World’s Largest
Aircraft-:
Aircraft keeps getting bigger. There’s the Boeing Dream
Lifter with a cargo hold of 65,000 cubic feet, the Super Jumbo Airbus that
seats 525 passengers, and the military C-5, which is six stories tall
and could fly six school busses from Delaware to Turkey without refueling.
If you think that the largest aircraft of all is in the US — then you are wrong. It is
in Russia. The Mriya – Russian for “dream” – is the only craft of its kind.
It was designed to be the air transport system for Russia’s reusable space
shuttle. Its maximum take-off weight is 640 tons.
The Mriya uses six
powerful jet engines to fly it. It is 275 feet long and stands 59
feet high. It is 26 feet longer than a Boeing 747 with and with a
290-foot wingspan, it outstretches the Boeing by 29 feet. It has put in
enough flying hours to circle the globe 46 times.
When parked on the runway, it looks like a giant mama bird with a
brood of chicks, Boeing included.
Ø
3. Biggest
Remote Control Robot in the World-:
Remote control toys are fun, and the bigger the better, so
it shouldn’t surprise anyone that Germany’s Zollner Elektronic AG spent six
years, with a team of fifteen people, designing the biggest remote control
robot ever.
The dragon was designed to replace the mechanical star of
Germany’s favorite play, “Drachenstich”. The original model had not been
replaced in 35 years, and had required four operators, so it didn’t really count as
a robot.
Zollner’s dragon
stands 51 feet tall, weighs 11 tons, is radio-controlled
and, of course, breathes fire. It’s powered by a 140 horsepower, 2.0
liter engine, and has a 39-foot wing span. Nor is the robot a dummy. With
both hydraulic and electronic components, it has nine separate controllers,
each containing two TI processors, a Fujitsu microcontroller, and
238 sensors for determining its environment.
Not only that, it
has veins that will bleed stage blood on cue —
a whole 80 liters worth. With so much realism put into its making, it seems
downright mean to spear it.
Ø
4. World’s
Largest
Motorcycle-:
Most cyclist have experienced the annoyance of being cut
off in traffic by large vehicles muscling
them to one side and have wished for something bossy enough to give them
respect. Maybe they should talk to Fabio Reggiani, who took Italy by
storm in building the largest motorcycle ever.
It’s the dream machine
of big boys who like big toys. Standing 16’8″ high, and weighing 5.5 tons,
it’s the biggest two-wheeled bike to ever travel 300 feet.
It features some very extended handle bars and a 5,000 cc 5.7 liter V8
Chevrolet engine with a three-speed transmission
gearbox.
Training wheels are included, although steering the
bike might prove somewhat of a challenge.
Ø
5. The Largest
Ship in the World-:
The Emma Maersk has had to surrender its reputation
as the largest floating vessel in the world to make way for the Prelude, that
took to the waters for the first time in South Korea. Technically,
however, the Prelude isn’t really a ship. It’s a floating natural gas facility
designed to capture, process, and store liquid natural gas from deep inside the
Earth. The 1,600-foot Prelude is three hundred feet longer than the Emma
Maersk. If stood on one end, it would be 150 feet taller than the Empire State Building.
The two halves of the hull were constructed separately, then joined together,
giving it a 243-foot width.
When fully laden, it
weighs in at 600,000 tons. Its storage tanks for holding liquid
petroleum have a capacity equivalent to approximately 175 Olympic swimmingpools.
A 305-foot turret runs through the ship to the sea floor to keep it
anchored and pivot in the direction of the wind. This, combined with three 6,700
horsepower engines, are its safeguards for handling up to category five
hurricanes. The one thing it won’t be able to do is squeeze
through the Panama Canal.
Ø
6. The World’s
Largest Vending Machine-:
Ø Some shopping malls put out a lot of effort to get noticed. When Berjaya
Times Square, a gigantic shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
held its tenth anniversary, it decided to commemorate it by building the largest vending machine in
the world. The machine took six months to plan and build and seven weeks
to assemble. Its total weight is over 7,000 pounds. A
capsule-containing globe with a diameter of fifteen feet, rests on a stand of
plywood and mild steel measuring 15 feet five inches in height.
Ø 125 capsules reside in the container. The
machine accepts acrylic tokens valued at around $15 each to credit a vend.
It dispenses certificates in its 2.5″ capsules for a wide variety of products and services,
including big-screen televisions, iPads, spa packages, and theme park passes.
It has recently entered the Guinness Book
of World Records as the largest vending machine in the world, which means
someone is sure to come along to try to outdo it.
Ø
7. A Giant
Mechanical Spider-:
Ø London took pride in owning their very own mechanical elephant, but
Liverpool decided to one-up them. On a rainy afternoon, a gigantic spider
ushered in from Salthouse Dock, to awe, thrill and scare spectators. The
giant mechanic spider, named La Princesse,
trundled down the streets at two miles an hour, eventually climbing the
side of the Concourse House, a derelict building on Lime Street. There, her
long legs touched down on five stories, from one end to the other.
Ø If La Princesse seems somewhat indifferent to attempts to please her, such
as a bath and soothing music, she’s still an impressive sight. Weighing in
at 37 tons, she stands 50 feet high and has 50 hydraulic axes of movement.
It takes twelve people to operate her. In order to transport her
from one place to another, she requires 16
cranes, eight cherry pickers and 250 crew members. She wasn’t
enthusiastically greeted by everyone. Some small children tried to hide from
her, and the arachnophobes tried to prevent her appearance, but one child
actually wanted to take her home. This plan was abandoned after the kid’s dad
explained she wouldn’t be able to fit through the door.
Ø
8. World’s
Largest Tunneling Machine-:
Ø When Seattle decided to replace the Alaskan Way
Viaduct — an elevated section of highway that runs between Elliott Bay
waterfront and the downtown district — with a tunnel, they hired the world’s
largest tunnel borer: a 300-foot long, five stories-high driller named Bertha. Bertha
is a very big girl — the 7,000 ton machine needed to be shipped to Seattle
in 31 pieces. With a diameter of 57.5 feet, she could easily
swallow the world’s second-largest borer, located in Florence, Italy.
Ø Despite her massive size, she was stopped cold December 6, 2013
by what the engineers could only describe as “an object”. Speculations ran from
a massive boulder laid to rest during the last Ice Age, to a lost part of the
city hidden underground since the Klondike Gold Rush. On January 3, 2014, the
object that was stopping Bertha was at least partially confirmed. It seems that
though she can muscle her way through tons of soil, debris and glacier rocks,
she’s unable to contend with an eight-inch diameter steel pipe.
Ø
9. The Giant
Bucket Wheel Excavator-:
While the Large Hadron Collider is the largest
underground machine, the world’s second largest machine is chewing up surface
above the ground. The Bagger 293 is
a brute built for titans. Built in Germany in 1995, the giant
bucket wheel excavator stands 315 feet tall and 740 feet long, and weighs in
at 31 million pounds. This multi-ton Tessie uses five operators to push her
along, and can move 8.5 million cubic feet of earth per day.
The Bagger may be very
good at excavating open mine operations, but it does have some handicaps. It
can’t go around obstacles, so workers must remove power lines, place sandbags
over roads and railroad tracks,
and seed fields with special grass to make operations smoother. Nor does the
Bagger see very well. Occasionally, it scoops up unsuspecting bulldozers.
Ø 10. The Large Hadron Collider-:
Ø
The largest machine in the world was
created to study the tiniest composition known: the structure of the atomic
nucleus. Nuclear accelerators are nothing new. They were first invented in
the 1930’s for investigating the many aspects of particle physics.
The Hadron Collider is seventeen miles in circumference and is buried
574 feet under the ground, near Geneva, Switzerland.
Ø Inside the Collider, two high-energy beams are shot at each other,
traveling at close to the speed of light. They are guided by thousands of
super-conducting magnets inside two ultra-high vacuum tubes. The magnets are
kept at a frigid -271.3 degrees, which is colder than the temperature of
outer space. There are 1,242 dipole magnets, each measuring 49 feet in
length for bending the beams, and 392 quadruple magnets measuring between 16-
23 feet long for focusing the beam.
Ø
Science doesn’t want to stop there
though. Plans are underway for a new underground accelerator that would be three times larger than
the Large Hadron Collider.
I hope that you will like this and in future I will be making
new amazing things in technology and science for you. It is easily readable by
making bold the facts.
Thank You.
By-Aryan Singh Rathore
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