Sadly there is only one small part of Antarctica that is public for people. About 95% of Antarctica is a restricted military area, so the Antarctica Van Life guys could not do much there :(
@@duquepp2078 Yeah, I heard that the US spent 2 trillion dollar and 20 years in Afghanistan to replace Taliban with Taliban, while JWST only cost only 10 billion. If these 2 trillion dollar was put into space exploration, we might be watching news about successful human landing on mars instead of human bombed to death.
If you have *a lot* of money, high-end "expedition vehicles" class RVs can get quite far, though not quite *that* far. Check out monsters like Unicat's EX74HDC or EX70HDQ.
For those in the 99.5% countries that use celsius (including Russia), -70 farenheit is -57 degrees celsius. But this video is actually wrong, they were designed to operate down to temperatures as low as -80 celsius.
-80 Celsius is nuts. I live in Canada and I remember it being as cold as -40 with the wind on one particularly bad day. Felt like the wind was trying to rip the skin of your face
@@pashapasovski5860 it is actualy town Oymyakon in Yakutiya region of Russia. Not exectly Siberia but you still can put it as North-East Siberia. -67.7 C by the way
people dont really understand how much it takes for a trip like this you have to have everyone with multiple designations and jobs, you have to be part mechanic part doctor part scientist you cant just send anyone out on one of these missions the less people the more one has to learn.
That's obvious. Those people had to figure out everything for themselves in the most harsh environment on earth. Wouldn't send a foot soldier to do an engineer's job. These people got paid well for working on the south pole :)
Way back in 1989 we were wintering in the then newly built India's Antarctic Research Station Maitri (70°46" S 11°46"E). I hitched a ride in Kharkovchanka of neighbouring Novolazarevskaya station. It was really warm very powerful machine which could haul with ease 20000 litres of fuel from the shelf.
В Советском Союзе было создано огромное количество невероятных машин, их настолько много, что о них можно создать отдельный канал, к примеру вы знали что в СССР был создан Лазерный танк? в смысле он не сжигал и не плавил врагов, этот танк создавал настолько яркий свет, что моментально ослеплял целые группы солдат, этот танк назывался проэкт 1К17 "Сжатие", А был и Шнекоход ЗВМ-2901, который в наши дни начали производить в России. Так же были такие машины как НАМИ-0157, ГАЗ-69, Москвич-2144, НАМИ-014СХЗ, МАЗ-7907, Проэкт 903 "Лунь", "Прогрев-Т"
Admit it, you used to dream of having a monstrous yet cozy and comfortable home-vehicle similar to this to explore the world when you were kid... Update: Wow! over 2k likes?! Look mom, I'm famous! I'm glad that you've recalled one of your childhood dreams.
Yeah, but the one I imagined had multiple cars like a train and had gun-turrets, because of course it did. It also had to be amphibious and would cross oceans by driving over the seabed... I was a very small kid when I thought of and drew these kinds of things, so I didn't understand how water pressure worked or just how deep the ocean was.
Really liked this one, its sometimes really nice to see stuff on odd land vehicles (especially ones that continue to see use because nothing has replaced it yet)
@@BluntEversmoke ahah my joke was misunderstood, cause I misspelled Entente (Antanta in Russian, the Union of the British Empire, France and Russian Empire)
I am always slightly amused by anglosphere mispronounceing anything Eastern European, even though it's already spelled properly in English 😁 It's no Sharkovshanka, but Kharkovchanka, KH being the letter CH (X in Cyrillic), pronounced roughly the same way as Jose in Spanish.
Yep, Jarkovchanka would be in Spanish. In English I don't get why they use the phoneme /j/ as KH when it sounds exactly as they pronounce the english H. Cyrillic X is just like H. It would be Harkovchanka like Hammer HA HAR ha, ha.
@Argentvs That's not entirely true. Cyrillic X is not read as H, Russians don't know how to properly pronounce it, that's why they say Khotel (you get me right? :D ) instead of Hotel with hard H as it is in English. For instance in Ukrainian, they do know the letter H and can pronounce it pretty well, their currency is hryvnia, written with cyrillic G instead. I am a Czech so I am pretty versatile in terms of pronouncing these words and letters, for us it would just be Charkovčanka. But yeah, KH is read as in KHaki or KHanate with K and some subtle background sound :D
@@ShiftyMoravianI didn't understand anything. When I hear the russian name pronounced it is exactly as our J in Spanish. Our J is H in english, Jajajaja, is laughing, hahahaha. Sounds same. In Russian XAXAXAXA. Same with CYXOИ. They write Sukhoi, but it is Sujoi for us in Spanish. In english it sounds SOO HOY. Su like in Susan and Hoy like in Hoyts Su-hoy.
Looking forward to the continuation of this story. There's some really cool land and sea vehicles out there that few know about. Keep up the good work. 👍
Guys, that's actually a great idea for the game. Just think. You're exploring Antarctica alone, in a vehicle like this. Fixing things up as you go, doing "science" missions.
Would be even better with a small crew, different characters have different talents, you have to be careful not to let stress separate the team, maybe some crew members will start relationships or turn out to be spies
Nick, I think in both Russian/Ukraine Kharkiv has no “Sh” sound in the beginning. It’s a pronounced with H. Try with Google translate and you will hear it.
Yeah I have no idea how he got the Sh pronunciation there. Unless this is some weird current day revisionism that the Ukrainian government is doing. I am Ukrainian American myself, and my family is from the eastern part of the country. Allot of names have been changed in Ukraine in recent years since 2014 that were never used by Ukrainian people because of Ukrainian nationalists trying to distance themselves from Russia. This is around the same time even the Russian language was banned in schools.
@@-Zevin-no, there’s nothing like this. I think he mispronounced the “ch” which is equal to “kh” in this case. The rest of your comment about “nationalists” and “banning of Russian language in schools” will be ignored by me, as it’s a bunch of nonsense.
Would love to see this vehicle re-imagined today...would be great to extend a cabin/engine room off the back with sound insulation so it didn't take up real estate/make too much noise.
Why would any russian explain a Ukrainian machine made by Ukrainians in Ukraine and named after Kharkiv, a Ukrainian city that russians currently bomb?
@@K_Ppppпочему нет? Почему бы не послушать об очередном советском/российском достижении? Тем более во времена, когда негативные стереотипы об обоих льются из каждого угла.
DT-30, DT-10, DT-8 and DT-5 are the ones i remember them making these days. All have the same basic design of quad track, twin chassis, hydraulically articulated in two axis. Amazing vehicles, perfect for Siberia.
You know, I saw a show a while back, I think it was about the Diatlov Pass, but the whole thing was in Siberia, so the first part of the journey was undertaken in old soviet military vehicles, and I distinctly remember how insane they had to be to survive the Siberian winters. Somehow this is even crazier...
The crazy thing is that the Russians had the perfect environment to test a prototype, but did do it. They just sent them off to be deployed in service.
V2 ballistic missiles were assembled in Denmark, by the hands of prisoners of concentration camps for Jews.. However, these missiles are called German, not Jewish or Danish
Diesel engines actually put you to sleep pretty easily due to the frequency of their vibrations. Not sure about Russian, but i can't imagine them being that different than everyone elses. I've slept at work hundreds of hours with the aid of diesel engines of all sorts, from Cat to Detroit to Cummins and Isuzu. Never fails... unless maybe the engine is revving at max rpm but that isn't typically how a diesel is run.
Nah, I do not think it was the engine noise primarily (although the engine noise/vibrations in enclosed metal box couldn't have been very pleasant), he mentioned the exhaust soots going inside, which means fumes too, which created the problem of the possibility of CO poisoning, and that was the biggest problem as they had to sleep on smaller intervals and stay on alert in case something happened.
@@RIlianP ya those are all terrible, but after staing those he did say that the noise would be bad, and i just know from experience that a diesel is great for putting you out, whereas gas engines are just an annoyance
I'm sure by now they've added a solar generator... some possible chance of a wind generator... to try to maximize options with charging batteries (mostly for heat)
Soviet characteristic : how to made as simple as you can even when doing troubleshooting, use firewood to warming up the engine. Simple but in harsh condition withimited sources its effective.
The same way they are doing it in the space station. I've watched once an American astronaut saying that America had all the tech but once a system was failing, everything went down with it. Also American equipment is a lot more expensive. Not saying American tech is inferior, on the contrary, but simple mechanical engineering should be implemented to reduce points of failure, in my opinion.
I think you did a great job with the video but I have one small critique. After you start showing the 3D model I would recommend only doing the outer skin peel/reveal thing once. I kept trying to get a good look at the layout and every time the camera stopped panning you would reskin and start over.
You DO realize this was not his work right? He is just showing you a Russian video...they did the 3D work...this dude does not work with 3D. Man, you guys are kinda dumb not to realize this...
In all seriousness however, this was a really cool video! Very informative, and I really enjoyed seeing this massive machine. The fact it sleeps people inside, shows that this thing was set to trek into some really wicked places. This would be wild to spend a day inside of.
Still people like to question the USSR capabilities for engineering and scientific development. Once again we run into a great video showing us a story in the book of forgotten history; stories they don't teach you in school.
Communism is a failed ideology that led to genocide and war, and you Russians do realise literally EVERY person in Europe hates your government and even people? So have fun defending the ussr online, in reality people still rightfully know it was a Russian colonial regime nothing more.
Ukraine, UNR, was occupied by Soviet Russia in 1921, and yes they used a puppet Ukrainian SSSR with capital in occupied Kharkiv to do that. So cope with the history @@zahrans
@@79keydetnope. You either embrace the soviet legacy, both good and bad, and respect your history, or reject everything from that period as "evil occupiers doing evil occupiers things to evilly occupy us", which includes old soviet built factories, hospitals, universities, railroads, metro, etc. Guess what Ukraine chose.
Like I said before we got the tech to visit and go to other worlds but no rather use it to destroy ourselves & conquer other countries for their shit..😢😢😢
It still baffles me how could anybody think that those smooth tires on snow cruiser could possibly work in Antarctica. Seriously, what was the thought process here?
When you compress snow, especially with a big vehicle, it would just fill any treads solid anyways. This is also bad for other reasons, since if you stopped for the night, snow in treads can turn to ice and lock the wheels in place. The wheels were big enough and the vehicle heavy enough that you wouldn't really need a lot of traction from treads anyways, and it's not that they're going up steep terrain. The idea is basically that as you roll forward, you're flattening out the snow and pushing it aside, rather than digging into it, which essentially creates a solid roadway out of snow. If you start adding treads, you'd have surface features left in the snow. If a crew needed to turn back for some serious reason, they would definitely want to follow the same path they took as best as possible, as it would be quicker and save on fuel, so leaving a smooth flat imprint would be more beneficial. That also helps if you're towing anything, since if you left tread patterns in the snow, whatever you're pulling would constantly be impeded slightly by it, creating drag. That could add up to quite a bit of extra fuel usage over time, and in a place where you might end up dangerously low on fuel, every potential savings of it could be a life or death situation. Even temperature can play a role, because the material could be much weaker at those temps, meaning treads could either wear quicker, or potentially crack and separate.
@@peoplez129 Thanks for very comprehensive explanation. However, its main reasoning about treads filling anyway still seems a bit "greenhorn-ish" to me, like it was thought up by someone who never actually worked in snowy conditions. Or muddy conditions. Or maybe in practice anywhere. I mean, after some time, mud will fill the treads of your boots just as snow would, but nobody says screw traction and wears smooth soles into any kind of rougher terrain, because everybody knows that's sure way to faceplant (which is basically what happened to snow cruiser immediately after disembarking, if I remember correctly). When something is impeding the crucial function of your machinery, you need to find ways to restore said function, not hope it would somehow work out without it.
You’d think that due to the SMO and worldwide news about Ukraine, having Kharkov region being on of the popular locations, you’d by now know how to pronounce it, without the use of any translators or native speakers. Nope
Another astonishing material, thank you so much! Please let me know if you need any help with Russian names/pronunciations so the upcoming videos would pe even more exciting and accurate. I'd be more than glad to assist.
Sorry, Nick, but it was 1958, not 1948. I was in school at that time and it was a ig deal. We had contests to name the expedition and drawings of what our ideas ofthe bases would be if we were going. This prompted us to actually studyaboutthe Geophysical Year and all about Antarctica and its animals, (no polar bears down there), but different penguins and leopard seals and birds.
Nuclear powered propulsion you mean to say right? And yes it would be ideal but even portable reactors are quite large and the vehicle would be like a land ship. It would be big enough that it would be probably all you would need though, getting it there would be a problem, it would have to be constructed there basically.
I assume we’re all men and women of culture here, but if you haven’t read about Shackleton and his Endurance expedition then you need to get on it toot sweet. It might be the most amazing feat of human perseverance and willpower to live ever recorded. To do what he and his crew did in Antarctica without anything resembling modern equipment is astonishing beyond belief. I’m sure their spirits look down on this equipment and they shake their heads.
That is one hell of a masterpiece that had so much to do with alot of tanks and snowcats swat vehicles that came after it world wide! I hope the creator got a Noble prize! 😊❤
Not to mention the numerous of ww2 rifles, sten, stg44, mg42, pistols such as the luger, c96 and also modern rifles as the ar15 has been used to make props for the star wars movies. And the empire is based on germany during ww2, their officer uniforms etc. George Lucas took inspiration from alot of things
Unfortunately the last part of the video is true for mostly all Soviet technology: space shuttles and supercomputers, jet trains and enormous plants all got scrapped and sold by pieces because people in the government cared more about gaining money than about their own country and people
Харьковчанка is pronounced like [ˈxarʲkəft͡ʃanka]. First letter H like (h)at, CH is mono-sound commonly used in wa(tch) and bea(ch). Emphasis on the second letter A
Well, there are populations in Siberia for whom below -70°C/-94°F temperatures are a normal winter, and it lasts the better part of the year. Truckers are using the many frozen strams as highways, the engines are running constantly because you couldn't restart them if they got cold, and it occasionally happened and still happens that people freeze to death on an otherwise normal trip from one city to the next.
Fine video, as always! Great work! If you want a pronunciation sample for russian words - google has decent voice reader for it. Yes, emphasis might be a bit wrong, but it will still be very understandable since more and more people use 'read text' addons for browsers which use same voices as google. Since you're going to make a video on Vityaz [Veetyaz'] I can help you with translation if needed. And if you'll manage to finish it, it will be excellent choice to complete collection with swedish small tracked vehicle which DT-30 has a lof in common, in terms of engineering approach.
Thank you for the review. Yes you are right there is no Kharkovchanka-3, but there is DT-30 "Vityaz" that was used to create Pancir-SA (arctic version). The original factory was in Kharkov city which become a Ukraine after USSR fail and Ukraine have no access to let's say "cold lands", so in general there is no need for such machine, but constructions has been proceeded in Russia
@@gennadiyviktorovich4661 how exactly country that is younger then me older then moscow? Modern ukraine has no relations with sich rada or kievan rus. Last Grand Knyaz of Kievan Rus was Russian Tsar by the way, so ukraine can't even claim to be successor to that state. And no, putting Rurikovich family symbol as your flag doesn't give you claims to that considering last rurikovich was Ivan 4th - the first Tsar of russia.
Russian Federation was founded in 1991. Let's be honest, getting into this argument from this angle is pointless. Ukrainians weren't just "made up" in the 90s. The specific peoples of both countries are much older than either state. Chances are high people from multiple countries worked on it during USSR times. And from what I see online it was build and engineered in Ukraine. A lot of heavy gear was designed and built in Ukraine back then.@@SapFeaRon
@@BubTheButcher difference between ukraine and russian federation is simple - russia actually took mantle of being successor state to ussr, which involved all loans(!). USSR also was successor to Russian Empire, which in turn was successor to Russian Tsardom and Moscow grand duchy, and Moscow duchy was successor to Kievan Rus (a term created by russians in 1980s by the way, proper name of that state is simply "Rus"). But i need to point out, that being called successor state involves 1) having claim 2)being recognized by other nations 3)paying any debts previous government left (ussr declared old loans null, but later then negotiated payment with france and uk). Ukraine did nothing of it, but still claims to be either true Russian kindgom, or heir to sich rada (which voted to be part of russian empire) or heir to USSR, or most popular - kievan rus. I wasn't saying anything about nationality tho. Just as state, they can't claimed to be successor of anything and need to forge new history instead of trying to cling to others.
The cool thing about Antarctica is it’s the only real place people are able to discover and claim new land for their countries whereas back in the day the whole world was pretty much like that
Brilliant presentation. Amazing to think that the Arctic Trucks Toyota Hilux has also driven to the South Pole and the North Pole with much less drama.
Theoretically, I think I can create a similar game. I have the necessary experience and knowledge. but in practice, I don't think I have enough money. I'll need to buy some equipment that will speed up the process significantly, and hire a couple more people.
For all those who consider this plant to be Ukrainian. The plant was founded by Russians during the time of the Russian Empire (then Ukraine did not exist as a state yet). Further, the USSR was engaged in the modernization of the plant and its management, the key engineers of the plant were mainly ethnic Russians. After the collapse of the USSR, Ukrainians inherited many different industries, the creation of which they mistakenly consider their merit.
Interesting history lesson, now for a class on critical thinking. So, if the national economy had collapsed then it would indicate those previous industries failed... If they had succeeded, then the entire system wouldn't have collapsed. You're saying the people who had to rebuild their economy almost entirely from the ground up don't deserve any credit for it?
Great video. Great research done! Those vehicles were always a big interest for me. Just one thing: it is not SHARKovchanka. K at the start of the name is silent. Thank you for this amazing video!
What's going on with the script at 12:30 ? "The heating system was situated at the back of the vehicle with, notably due to the extreme freezing temperatures, the crew couldn't venture outside making the entire vehicle a vital survival vehicle. A centralised heating system was located at the back of the vehicle sending heat to various sections. Notably it was equipped with an electric snow melting device that windows could be heated to give a clear view." It sounds like parts of a few sentences have been mixed together.
I know they were unstable but they would have solved most problems and if it exploded it was on the North Pole I mean they equipped freaking lighthouses with nuclear reactors so why not a expedition vehicle?
Loved the gray 3D models on the bench, almost thought they were resin. Then I thought, man, that would be a cool print in resin. You have the files available to 3D print?
haha, can you cite a single soviet device/system that made it to the rest of the world and became a world reference? no obviously, soviet "engineering" was mostly crap.
First, it's Harkovchanka, not CHarkovchanka. Second, it's Soviets, not Russians. The vehicle was designed by a number of engineers and scientists from Russian Federation, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova and Ukraine (hence, the name Harkovchanka -- a female from Kharkov). And third, like it's American counterpart, Harkovchanka turned out to be a failed project, too.
as always, in the comments there is an offended Ukrainian who did not even read the names of those who invented and based on the AT-T. only the Russians can still produce all this, and Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, after the collapse of the USSR. they can't do anything. and without evidence we should believe you? because Russian engineers lived in Kharkov, Kazakhstan and Belarus?
If few ukrainians participated in the creation of this machine, they did not do it of their own free will. They were forced to work for free, subjected to holodomor and beaten with sticks.
Amazing work as usual, those 3D models of the Kharkovchanka really brought it to life 😍 beautiful!
Thank you very much Callum, your video was instrumental to the making of mine. Everyone please go check out his channel link in the description.
Thank you very much Callum, your video was instrumental to the making of mine. Everyone please go check out his channel link in the description.
jes ! looks impressiv real ! onley the snow wo disaperes shows its not real .
Link to the part they meet
Was just going to say! Your video on this subject was brilliant Callum
if they used this today you already know someone in the crew would start a vlog channel: *Antarctica Van Life*
I would watch the hell out of that.
Sadly there is only one small part of Antarctica that is public for people. About 95% of Antarctica is a restricted military area, so the Antarctica Van Life guys could not do much there :(
Living the van life 😂 cringe youtuber
title will be "Antarctica Village Life by a Russia girl"
Similar things are up and running but not those
i really appreciate when technologies are used on thing that make humanity moving forward instead of make people dead.
A concept that the U.S don't get
@@duquepp2078 Yeah, I heard that the US spent 2 trillion dollar and 20 years in Afghanistan to replace Taliban with Taliban, while JWST only cost only 10 billion. If these 2 trillion dollar was put into space exploration, we might be watching news about successful human landing on mars instead of human bombed to death.
@@duquepp2078The US invented warfare? Who are you people and are you able to even tie your own shoes?!
@@mtb416 Ikr, idiots.
@@duquepp2078ye
An apocalyptic exploratory game where you have one of these as a mobile, cozy, base would be cool.
Great idea!
ooooo. great basis concept indeed. класно!!
Would be cool to have something like this in Death Stranding 2, a vehicle that has a room.
And oil refinery nearby.
Starfield > Landfield
With the amenities included in the Kharkovchanka, it looks like it is the final boss of RV/Camper vans
If you have *a lot* of money, high-end "expedition vehicles" class RVs can get quite far, though not quite *that* far. Check out monsters like Unicat's EX74HDC or EX70HDQ.
This words means woman from Kharkiv, Ukraine
@@dmytrosergienkoKharkov, Ukrainian SSR
For those in the 99.5% countries that use celsius (including Russia), -70 farenheit is -57 degrees celsius. But this video is actually wrong, they were designed to operate down to temperatures as low as -80 celsius.
-80 Celsius is nuts. I live in Canada and I remember it being as cold as -40 with the wind on one particularly bad day. Felt like the wind was trying to rip the skin of your face
Coldest recorded temperature in a living settlement was in Siberia -57C ,I believe!
@@pashapasovski5860No, - 72 c, Oymyakon
@@pashapasovski5860 it is actualy town Oymyakon in Yakutiya region of Russia. Not exectly Siberia but you still can put it as North-East Siberia. -67.7 C by the way
@jettrd_utilitychnl4230 yeah you are right
people dont really understand how much it takes for a trip like this you have to have everyone with multiple designations and jobs, you have to be part mechanic part doctor part scientist you cant just send anyone out on one of these missions the less people the more one has to learn.
Almost space exploration but in earth.
That's obvious. Those people had to figure out everything for themselves in the most harsh environment on earth. Wouldn't send a foot soldier to do an engineer's job. These people got paid well for working on the south pole :)
@@DK-ei4edВ Советском союзе система образования со школьной скамьи делала людей универсальными специалистами !
No. You'd only have yo get a couple idiots to follow instructions.
@@digitalunderverse2315 And if the one intended to instruct them is incapacitated?
Way back in 1989 we were wintering in the then newly built India's Antarctic Research Station Maitri (70°46" S 11°46"E). I hitched a ride in Kharkovchanka of neighbouring Novolazarevskaya station. It was really warm very powerful machine which could haul with ease 20000 litres of fuel from the shelf.
Russia > India
Wow
Nice!
Как это понять вытащить с полки?
shelf переводится не только, как "полка", но и как "шельф" ))@@КаЯкер
В Советском Союзе было создано огромное количество невероятных машин, их настолько много, что о них можно создать отдельный канал, к примеру вы знали что в СССР был создан Лазерный танк? в смысле он не сжигал и не плавил врагов, этот танк создавал настолько яркий свет, что моментально ослеплял целые группы солдат, этот танк назывался проэкт 1К17 "Сжатие", А был и Шнекоход ЗВМ-2901, который в наши дни начали производить в России.
Так же были такие машины как НАМИ-0157, ГАЗ-69, Москвич-2144, НАМИ-014СХЗ, МАЗ-7907, Проэкт 903 "Лунь", "Прогрев-Т"
Admit it, you used to dream of having a monstrous yet cozy and comfortable home-vehicle similar to this to explore the world when you were kid...
Update: Wow! over 2k likes?!
Look mom, I'm famous!
I'm glad that you've recalled one of your childhood dreams.
I still do
How did you know?
@@jimbrent8151
Because we were all kids at some point...
@@steven401ytx
Good!
Yeah, but the one I imagined had multiple cars like a train and had gun-turrets, because of course it did. It also had to be amphibious and would cross oceans by driving over the seabed... I was a very small kid when I thought of and drew these kinds of things, so I didn't understand how water pressure worked or just how deep the ocean was.
Soviet engineering is awe inspiring. Simple, utilitarian and dirt cheap.
Like Chernobyl, right?
It’s inspiring, but sometimes not always the best solution, depending.
@@blakerackley8874 the meltdown was a result of an experiment gone wrong
@@blakerackley8874Chernobyl happened because of human error, not due to reactor being faulty.
@@blakerackley8874Three Mile Island, Fukushima - so what?
Calum also has a deep dive video on this series of vehicle if anyone wants more details.
Yes we have linked it! Calum really helped with this video
@@FoundAndExplainedAny possible future collabs?
Also looking forward to the video on that 3rd generation vehicle
Calum. I love that dude's deep dives. I tend to rewatch them when pain wakes me up at night and unable to fall back to sleep 😴
you can say about russia what you want. But when it comes to what they are able to build (simple and durable), they are the masters of their craft
Here's my overview of such vehicle near Progress base in Antarctica ruclips.net/video/kYTM-d3kavA/видео.html
Are you joking me ??? 🤷🏻♂️
The USSR. Failed Miserably.
Too much corruption for Russia to suceed either
@@RobertDean-x5e Who tf are you?
Soviet Russia*
Really liked this one, its sometimes really nice to see stuff on odd land vehicles (especially ones that continue to see use because nothing has replaced it yet)
They're probably still at the base.
I agree…it really speaks to the faithful engineering involved.
It was INSANE.
VTOL Aircraft has replaced them.
remember the American purpose built wheeled vehicle for Antarctic? it moved few feet and got lost under the ice😂
If you cross a tank with Antarctica, you get... Antanktica.
Nice one 😂
Great joke, “tanks a lot.”
If it is a WW-1 tank, then it’s Antantctica
P.S. that’s in Russian, in English it would be Ententerctica
@@Fuseflight09 Well, the Mk whatever WWI British tanks DO provide ample internal space, soooooo.... :D
@@BluntEversmoke ahah my joke was misunderstood, cause I misspelled Entente (Antanta in Russian, the Union of the British Empire, France and Russian Empire)
i skipped the hell out of your ad
RUclips premium 🎉🎉
@@luToursAndRecoveries ad block
@@luToursAndRecoveriesI ain’t paying for RUclips lol
@@Bastos9458 😆😆
It's ok I watched it twice to make it up
Your videos are my new discovery channel. Thank you for all your time and effort. You guys are crushing it.
I am always slightly amused by anglosphere mispronounceing anything Eastern European, even though it's already spelled properly in English 😁
It's no Sharkovshanka, but Kharkovchanka, KH being the letter CH (X in Cyrillic), pronounced roughly the same way as Jose in Spanish.
Yep, Jarkovchanka would be in Spanish. In English I don't get why they use the phoneme /j/ as KH when it sounds exactly as they pronounce the english H. Cyrillic X is just like H.
It would be Harkovchanka like Hammer HA HAR ha, ha.
@Argentvs That's not entirely true. Cyrillic X is not read as H, Russians don't know how to properly pronounce it, that's why they say Khotel (you get me right? :D ) instead of Hotel with hard H as it is in English. For instance in Ukrainian, they do know the letter H and can pronounce it pretty well, their currency is hryvnia, written with cyrillic G instead. I am a Czech so I am pretty versatile in terms of pronouncing these words and letters, for us it would just be Charkovčanka. But yeah, KH is read as in KHaki or KHanate with K and some subtle background sound :D
@@ShiftyMoravianI didn't understand anything.
When I hear the russian name pronounced it is exactly as our J in Spanish. Our J is H in english, Jajajaja, is laughing, hahahaha. Sounds same. In Russian XAXAXAXA.
Same with CYXOИ. They write Sukhoi, but it is Sujoi for us in Spanish. In english it sounds SOO HOY. Su like in Susan and Hoy like in Hoyts Su-hoy.
@@ArgentvsKh and j are similar but not the same. I speak both languages
@@Argentvs I yet again misunderstood :D Sorry, you're right, now I understood, because reading HaHa in my head sounds as if it was the H hotel :D
Looking forward to the continuation of this story. There's some really cool land and sea vehicles out there that few know about. Keep up the good work. 👍
I always loved the idea of bulky compact mobile machinery shielding you from a hostile environment
I have too. Something so friggen cool about it
Guys, that's actually a great idea for the game. Just think. You're exploring Antarctica alone, in a vehicle like this. Fixing things up as you go, doing "science" missions.
Would be even better with a small crew, different characters have different talents, you have to be careful not to let stress separate the team, maybe some crew members will start relationships or turn out to be spies
Too boring. White space, no roads, no sights, nothing. Apart from the dashboard.
I am building a game like this.
@@tomiczdarko Do you work alone?
I do@@__-vb3ht
Nick, I think in both Russian/Ukraine Kharkiv has no “Sh” sound in the beginning. It’s a pronounced with H. Try with Google translate and you will hear it.
Yeah I have no idea how he got the Sh pronunciation there. Unless this is some weird current day revisionism that the Ukrainian government is doing. I am Ukrainian American myself, and my family is from the eastern part of the country. Allot of names have been changed in Ukraine in recent years since 2014 that were never used by Ukrainian people because of Ukrainian nationalists trying to distance themselves from Russia. This is around the same time even the Russian language was banned in schools.
@@-Zevin- you're a clown, not Ukrainian.
@@-Zevin-nah man, he just got inspiration from the Shaqule Onale guy
"Shark-off" lol. Проводница ругается: "Хто нахарькыв? Немедленно убрать харчки!"
@@-Zevin-no, there’s nothing like this. I think he mispronounced the “ch” which is equal to “kh” in this case. The rest of your comment about “nationalists” and “banning of Russian language in schools” will be ignored by me, as it’s a bunch of nonsense.
Would love to see this vehicle re-imagined today...would be great to extend a cabin/engine room off the back with sound insulation so it didn't take up real estate/make too much noise.
I think a modern version would use a hydrogen powered fuel cell to face the cold and noise problem.
hydrogen requires massive fuel cells and constant refueling due to low energy density
Crazy, how you did more job on bringing this up to the people than any russian youtuber I've found. Mad respect
Why would any russian explain a Ukrainian machine made by Ukrainians in Ukraine and named after Kharkiv, a Ukrainian city that russians currently bomb?
Ты очень нуждался в этой информации, дружок??😂😂😂😂
@@K_Ppppпочему нет? Почему бы не послушать об очередном советском/российском достижении? Тем более во времена, когда негативные стереотипы об обоих льются из каждого угла.
@@K_Pppp I know I needed it. I live for it.
I've always been fascinated with the kharkovchanka every since I found out about it, I absolutely love that monster of a vehicle!
It is basically a land submarine and that's so darn cool.
3:32 man really just wacked pingoo into the ocean huh
I was gonna comment about this 😂😂
They stink like fk, that's maybe why.
@@LukeEdward1 YESSS IM NOT THE ONLY ONE lol
Yooo I saw that too I was looking for a comment!🤣
What a piece of shit. You’ve gotta be to punk an innocent penguin like that.
The courage to go to such an extreme environment in unproven PROTOTYPES.
Real courage 👍
DT-30, DT-10, DT-8 and DT-5 are the ones i remember them making these days. All have the same basic design of quad track, twin chassis, hydraulically articulated in two axis. Amazing vehicles, perfect for Siberia.
ruclips.net/video/pf3XQxDL5c0/видео.htmlsi=JFSqXokLp66gH4uv&t=585
Never heard of Calum till today, very much appreciate you bringing it to light.
Calum is good content. 👍
Really good content. His enthusiasm is very inspiring.
9:55 I love how the untouched snow in front of the vehicle is spontaneously bubbling up 😁
You know, I saw a show a while back, I think it was about the Diatlov Pass, but the whole thing was in Siberia, so the first part of the journey was undertaken in old soviet military vehicles, and I distinctly remember how insane they had to be to survive the Siberian winters. Somehow this is even crazier...
And I know that I probably spelled *Diatlov* wrong, so please feel free to correct me.
@@evanpodwalny3531 D´yatlov. Basically, you are not far off. The only difference is that they pronounced an "er" after "D" which is here silent.
It was in the Ural mountains, not in Siberia
The crazy thing is that the Russians had the perfect environment to test a prototype, but did do it. They just sent them off to be deployed in service.
@@superdave8248У американцев есть Аляска да и Канада рядом но испытать свою технику так и не смогли.
Thank you for such an informative video! This vehicle was made in my native city Kharkiv, Ukraine. Greetings from Ukraine!)
V2 ballistic missiles were assembled in Denmark, by the hands of prisoners of concentration camps for Jews.. However, these missiles are called German, not Jewish or Danish
@@dmitry4c996 nice
Ukraine is Russia dummy
Diesel engines actually put you to sleep pretty easily due to the frequency of their vibrations. Not sure about Russian, but i can't imagine them being that different than everyone elses. I've slept at work hundreds of hours with the aid of diesel engines of all sorts, from Cat to Detroit to Cummins and Isuzu. Never fails... unless maybe the engine is revving at max rpm but that isn't typically how a diesel is run.
Nah, I do not think it was the engine noise primarily (although the engine noise/vibrations in enclosed metal box couldn't have been very pleasant), he mentioned the exhaust soots going inside, which means fumes too, which created the problem of the possibility of CO poisoning, and that was the biggest problem as they had to sleep on smaller intervals and stay on alert in case something happened.
@@RIlianP ya those are all terrible, but after staing those he did say that the noise would be bad, and i just know from experience that a diesel is great for putting you out, whereas gas engines are just an annoyance
@@jasonlauritsen5587 as a long haul trucker you ain't lying. Get some damn good sleep in that sucker.
I'm sure by now they've added a solar generator... some possible chance of a wind generator... to try to maximize options with charging batteries (mostly for heat)
have you been in a big boat or ship's engine compartment ? Hard to get asleep there. These are not usual diesel engines.
Kharkhovchanka is more of a "Hark" than "Char" sound
yeah he butchered the hell out of it lol. Kaar-Kuhv (or Kaar-keev today)
Yep . It’s pronounced Hark-Ov-Chan-Ka actually
And he had it written in the English orthography... imagine if he had it written in Polish ortography, "Charkowczanka" :D
@@ExarchGamingit was excrushiating to hear it pronounshed
I'm from Kharkov and i'm offended
Soviet characteristic : how to made as simple as you can even when doing troubleshooting, use firewood to warming up the engine. Simple but in harsh condition withimited sources its effective.
The same way they are doing it in the space station. I've watched once an American astronaut saying that America had all the tech but once a system was failing, everything went down with it. Also American equipment is a lot more expensive. Not saying American tech is inferior, on the contrary, but simple mechanical engineering should be implemented to reduce points of failure, in my opinion.
except, it usually did not work, and did not last either.
The things this world could accomplish by putting differences aside
I love the aviation videos, but i'm glad to see this one too. great content, keep it up!
I think you did a great job with the video but I have one small critique. After you start showing the 3D model I would recommend only doing the outer skin peel/reveal thing once. I kept trying to get a good look at the layout and every time the camera stopped panning you would reskin and start over.
🤣
I was thinking the same thing, like bro stop covering it again I'm trying to look inside. Smh.
@@nobytes2 It's not remotely accurate, so it doesn't matter.
You DO realize this was not his work right? He is just showing you a Russian video...they did the 3D work...this dude does not work with 3D. Man, you guys are kinda dumb not to realize this...
What a first world problem 😅
Soviet engineering can be described in one sentence: "The Soviets united the tank and *insert whatever you want*"
All these RV/Van/Car living videos, thisd be the ultimate one. Imagine turning up at a Costco parking lot in this.
In all seriousness however, this was a really cool video! Very informative, and I really enjoyed seeing this massive machine. The fact it sleeps people inside, shows that this thing was set to trek into some really wicked places. This would be wild to spend a day inside of.
This was very fun to watch. What a pleasure it would have been to design and drive this thing!
Yes. Do videos about land vehicles and ships. Curious planes are a bit overloaded
Yeah, you seem to be right.
Like Project Habakkuk?
Though you have to admit, those paper project aircraft are pretty wacky and innovative, if I do say so myself!
What about car concepts?
@@adastra7939 I believe "land vehicles" covers that mate
Still people like to question the USSR capabilities for engineering and scientific development. Once again we run into a great video showing us a story in the book of forgotten history; stories they don't teach you in school.
dude everything that was “invented” in the USSR was stolen technology from Germany, Japan and the USA
Communism is a failed ideology that led to genocide and war, and you Russians do realise literally EVERY person in Europe hates your government and even people? So have fun defending the ussr online, in reality people still rightfully know it was a Russian colonial regime nothing more.
Little did we know, this was just a test bed to make a vehicle capable of going to Ivan's in-laws house in Siberia
Kremlin: We need to cross Antartica in winter by vehicle what materials do you need?
Soviet Engineer: Yes
Such decisions were not made in Kremlin.
Ukrainian engineer in this case.
@@79keydet For all intent and purposes he was a SOVIET engineer. That is until 91-92.
Ukraine, UNR, was occupied by Soviet Russia in 1921, and yes they used a puppet Ukrainian SSSR with capital in occupied Kharkiv to do that. So cope with the history @@zahrans
@@79keydetnope. You either embrace the soviet legacy, both good and bad, and respect your history, or reject everything from that period as "evil occupiers doing evil occupiers things to evilly occupy us", which includes old soviet built factories, hospitals, universities, railroads, metro, etc. Guess what Ukraine chose.
Love this channel, I hope one day we can all work together as one, and build these machines on other planets to serve humanity and beyond.
💯
imagine what humanity could achieve by working together.
Like I said before we got the tech to visit and go to other worlds but no rather use it to destroy ourselves & conquer other countries for their shit..😢😢😢
That would be cool!
What the hell are you dribbling on about
Well, looks like i just found a new channel to binge watch!! Great vids thanks bro you earned a sub!!
It still baffles me how could anybody think that those smooth tires on snow cruiser could possibly work in Antarctica. Seriously, what was the thought process here?
When you compress snow, especially with a big vehicle, it would just fill any treads solid anyways. This is also bad for other reasons, since if you stopped for the night, snow in treads can turn to ice and lock the wheels in place. The wheels were big enough and the vehicle heavy enough that you wouldn't really need a lot of traction from treads anyways, and it's not that they're going up steep terrain. The idea is basically that as you roll forward, you're flattening out the snow and pushing it aside, rather than digging into it, which essentially creates a solid roadway out of snow. If you start adding treads, you'd have surface features left in the snow. If a crew needed to turn back for some serious reason, they would definitely want to follow the same path they took as best as possible, as it would be quicker and save on fuel, so leaving a smooth flat imprint would be more beneficial. That also helps if you're towing anything, since if you left tread patterns in the snow, whatever you're pulling would constantly be impeded slightly by it, creating drag. That could add up to quite a bit of extra fuel usage over time, and in a place where you might end up dangerously low on fuel, every potential savings of it could be a life or death situation. Even temperature can play a role, because the material could be much weaker at those temps, meaning treads could either wear quicker, or potentially crack and separate.
@@peoplez129 Thanks for very comprehensive explanation. However, its main reasoning about treads filling anyway still seems a bit "greenhorn-ish" to me, like it was thought up by someone who never actually worked in snowy conditions. Or muddy conditions. Or maybe in practice anywhere. I mean, after some time, mud will fill the treads of your boots just as snow would, but nobody says screw traction and wears smooth soles into any kind of rougher terrain, because everybody knows that's sure way to faceplant (which is basically what happened to snow cruiser immediately after disembarking, if I remember correctly).
When something is impeding the crucial function of your machinery, you need to find ways to restore said function, not hope it would somehow work out without it.
11:32 - As a kid in school, I would daydream about machines like these and the adventures they would open up!
"Kharkov shanker" sounds like a serial killer haha
especially with so butchered pronunciation
spending a week video editing, no problem. spending an hour on discord with a native speaker practicing names of locations, impossible
You’d think that due to the SMO and worldwide news about Ukraine, having Kharkov region being on of the popular locations, you’d by now know how to pronounce it, without the use of any translators or native speakers. Nope
Nah sounds like a Russian sitar player
@@vyacheslavpetrov4713due to the what? You means russian bloody naZi invasion
I find these vehicles interesting, good job with the visuals with the schematics of the inside of the vehicles.
Another astonishing material, thank you so much! Please let me know if you need any help with Russian names/pronunciations so the upcoming videos would pe even more exciting and accurate. I'd be more than glad to assist.
Sorry, Nick, but it was 1958, not 1948. I was in school at that time and it was a ig deal. We had contests to name the expedition and drawings of what our ideas ofthe bases would be if we were going. This prompted us to actually studyaboutthe Geophysical Year and all about Antarctica and its animals, (no polar bears down there), but different penguins and leopard seals and birds.
Calum and his uploads are really, really good. This type of environment would be ideal for nuclear propulsion, you would think.
U S A ... U S A
They freedom'd up one actually
ruclips.net/video/KpWv68xECrY/видео.html
Nuclear powered propulsion you mean to say right? And yes it would be ideal but even portable reactors are quite large and the vehicle would be like a land ship. It would be big enough that it would be probably all you would need though, getting it there would be a problem, it would have to be constructed there basically.
I assume we’re all men and women of culture here, but if you haven’t read about Shackleton and his Endurance expedition then you need to get on it toot sweet. It might be the most amazing feat of human perseverance and willpower to live ever recorded. To do what he and his crew did in Antarctica without anything resembling modern equipment is astonishing beyond belief. I’m sure their spirits look down on this equipment and they shake their heads.
That is one hell of a masterpiece that had so much to do with alot of tanks and snowcats swat vehicles that came after it world wide! I hope the creator got a Noble prize! 😊❤
Designed and built by Ukrainians in Ukraine, Kharkiv
@@79keydet В украине 70 процентов русских живет по мнению фашингтон пост Украинство это секта
@@79keydet Ой, да всем нас рать😄
a nobel prize in what?
Antarctica is like a different world no wonder it looks like a Sci fi rover for space
Always love your vids. And you don't care about the politics, you're a true connoisseur of human ingenuity!
The video started with politics. As always dismissive of Russia
Sure he not, so why he said and put on video pic "russian" but not soviet. And Kharkov(chanka) is Ukraine. He didnt even told who Vernadskiy is.
I don’t care what anyone says. I still think it looks warm and cozy inside.
Love those 3D models, very nicely done and the explanation was very well conducted 👍👍👍
The mighty Kharkovchanka, made on T-54 tank chassis. The ultimate Antarctic vehicle since 1958.
Not tank but heavy artillery tractor AT-T
@@sanproekt AT-T was made on T-54 chassis, so it's just the same.
@@Haktarr Not the same! Only same components was used
@@sanproekt Don't get so excited lol
0:15 reminds me of early late 90’s very early 2000’s Lego Arctic set
The coolant issue could’ve been fixed if they ran the coolant pipe outside the vehicle then back in
This is what the Jawas tank in Star Wars seems to be based off of.
Also, AT-T is very close to AT-AT. Georgie Lucas likes Russian made things I see.
Not to mention the numerous of ww2 rifles, sten, stg44, mg42, pistols such as the luger, c96 and also modern rifles as the ar15 has been used to make props for the star wars movies. And the empire is based on germany during ww2, their officer uniforms etc. George Lucas took inspiration from alot of things
Советского производства, путинская РФ - это страна паразит на теле СССР.
@@TapirrrEven to the sound and speeds of certain ships which is based on WW2 planes.
Unfortunately the last part of the video is true for mostly all Soviet technology: space shuttles and supercomputers, jet trains and enormous plants all got scrapped and sold by pieces because people in the government cared more about gaining money than about their own country and people
Харьковчанка is pronounced like [ˈxarʲkəft͡ʃanka]. First letter H like (h)at, CH is mono-sound commonly used in wa(tch) and bea(ch). Emphasis on the second letter A
It should be pronounced Kharkivjanka, Харків'янка
Well, there are populations in Siberia for whom below -70°C/-94°F temperatures are a normal winter, and it lasts the better part of the year.
Truckers are using the many frozen strams as highways, the engines are running constantly because you couldn't restart them if they got cold, and it occasionally happened and still happens that people freeze to death on an otherwise normal trip from one city to the next.
I’m so glad you did this. These are one of the coolest vehicles I had ever heard of: it’s like a ducking g land boat!
Fine video, as always! Great work! If you want a pronunciation sample for russian words - google has decent voice reader for it. Yes, emphasis might be a bit wrong, but it will still be very understandable since more and more people use 'read text' addons for browsers which use same voices as google.
Since you're going to make a video on Vityaz [Veetyaz'] I can help you with translation if needed. And if you'll manage to finish it, it will be excellent choice to complete collection with swedish small tracked vehicle which DT-30 has a lof in common, in terms of engineering approach.
Thank you for the review. Yes you are right there is no Kharkovchanka-3, but there is DT-30 "Vityaz" that was used to create Pancir-SA (arctic version).
The original factory was in Kharkov city which become a Ukraine after USSR fail and Ukraine have no access to let's say "cold lands", so in general there is no need for such machine, but constructions has been proceeded in Russia
do not deceive society. Ukraine was a separate republic within the USSR! Ukraine is 500 years older than Moscow
@@gennadiyviktorovich4661
Yes, life is always like this...
First they come up with a story for fools, and then they are sent to die for it.
@@gennadiyviktorovich4661 how exactly country that is younger then me older then moscow? Modern ukraine has no relations with sich rada or kievan rus. Last Grand Knyaz of Kievan Rus was Russian Tsar by the way, so ukraine can't even claim to be successor to that state. And no, putting Rurikovich family symbol as your flag doesn't give you claims to that considering last rurikovich was Ivan 4th - the first Tsar of russia.
Russian Federation was founded in 1991. Let's be honest, getting into this argument from this angle is pointless. Ukrainians weren't just "made up" in the 90s. The specific peoples of both countries are much older than either state. Chances are high people from multiple countries worked on it during USSR times. And from what I see online it was build and engineered in Ukraine. A lot of heavy gear was designed and built in Ukraine back then.@@SapFeaRon
@@BubTheButcher difference between ukraine and russian federation is simple - russia actually took mantle of being successor state to ussr, which involved all loans(!). USSR also was successor to Russian Empire, which in turn was successor to Russian Tsardom and Moscow grand duchy, and Moscow duchy was successor to Kievan Rus (a term created by russians in 1980s by the way, proper name of that state is simply "Rus").
But i need to point out, that being called successor state involves 1) having claim 2)being recognized by other nations 3)paying any debts previous government left (ussr declared old loans null, but later then negotiated payment with france and uk).
Ukraine did nothing of it, but still claims to be either true Russian kindgom, or heir to sich rada (which voted to be part of russian empire) or heir to USSR, or most popular - kievan rus.
I wasn't saying anything about nationality tho. Just as state, they can't claimed to be successor of anything and need to forge new history instead of trying to cling to others.
When i was younger i remember building a lego version of these things. Pretty cool.
The cool thing about Antarctica is it’s the only real place people are able to discover and claim new land for their countries whereas back in the day the whole world was pretty much like that
Uninhabitable
All these vehicles look right out of star wars
First thought when starting this video was of Callum's video on the American stuff.
That man really does make some nice videos.
For those who are curious: Kharkovchanka means a woman from Kharkov (the city). I find this naming kind of cute
yep, it was designed and built by Ukrainians, not Russians.
@@79keydetIt was designed and built by the Soviets.
Brilliant presentation.
Amazing to think that the Arctic Trucks Toyota Hilux has also driven to the South Pole and the North Pole with much less drama.
Amazing, how hot it is to make vehicles in the past for that continent
It’s not like they were stock Hilux trucks. They ran on jet fuel and had to be on 24/7.
Could make a post nuclear soviet game where you survive in one of these and upgrade it as you go
Theoretically, I think I can create a similar game. I have the necessary experience and knowledge. but in practice, I don't think I have enough money. I'll need to buy some equipment that will speed up the process significantly, and hire a couple more people.
Outstanding job, as always!
That looks so cool!
For all those who consider this plant to be Ukrainian. The plant was founded by Russians during the time of the Russian Empire (then Ukraine did not exist as a state yet). Further, the USSR was engaged in the modernization of the plant and its management, the key engineers of the plant were mainly ethnic Russians. After the collapse of the USSR, Ukrainians inherited many different industries, the creation of which they mistakenly consider their merit.
Interesting history lesson, now for a class on critical thinking. So, if the national economy had collapsed then it would indicate those previous industries failed... If they had succeeded, then the entire system wouldn't have collapsed. You're saying the people who had to rebuild their economy almost entirely from the ground up don't deserve any credit for it?
Russian chauvinism is what you are saying. According to you there was no russians up before Peter the great?
Pervert logic
Great video. Great research done! Those vehicles were always a big interest for me. Just one thing: it is not SHARKovchanka. K at the start of the name is silent. Thank you for this amazing video!
This got me too😂😂😂😂
I immediately was impressed by the humor in this video given by the narrator. Well done!
@Found and Explained: The sound in the beginning of Charkovčanka is not the "ch" as in "check". It is the slavic "ch" as in "chasm", I believe.
It's Харьковчанка, so you need to pronounce Ch as H in the word He for example, so it should be Harkovchanka
More ground vehicle documentaries please 🙌
3:35 😂, is that a clip of someone smacking a penguin into the water 💀💀💀
Awesome vehicle this artillery truck on tracks.Beastly looking tracked vehicle and love to own one!Cheers from Canada.Two thumbs up.
In Kharkov you can pronounce "Kh" like in "hacker" or "hatcher". Try to say "Harkov". You says it like "shark" and it's very funny.
I would have put the diesel tank in the middle of the living area. You could use it as a huge thermal store by warming it using engine coolant.
Can I buy one? I'm serious.
Hi serious, I'm dad
What's going on with the script at 12:30 ? "The heating system was situated at the back of the vehicle with, notably due to the extreme freezing temperatures, the crew couldn't venture outside making the entire vehicle a vital survival vehicle. A centralised heating system was located at the back of the vehicle sending heat to various sections. Notably it was equipped with an electric snow melting device that windows could be heated to give a clear view." It sounds like parts of a few sentences have been mixed together.
Leave it to Russians to figure out how to work in the snow
I’m so confused why dident the Soviet Union not just slap a nuclear reactor on a trailer and then boom heat and power
To prevent it from getting into american arms should the things go wrong
Have you seen their nuclear submarines?
@@chaosacsend9653 I live near the nuclear marine plant. My grandfather and uncle worked there as chief engineers
I know they were unstable but they would have solved most problems and if it exploded it was on the North Pole I mean they equipped freaking lighthouses with nuclear reactors so why not a expedition vehicle?
Loved the gray 3D models on the bench, almost thought they were resin. Then I thought, man, that would be a cool print in resin. You have the files available to 3D print?
No one does winter better than the Russians
Great documentary and I'm glad that you didn't say that it is an "ukranian" made vehicle 👍🏼
Damn ur in the uk, shame on my country for not deporting you
Never underestimate the Soviet engineering.
haha, can you cite a single soviet device/system that made it to the rest of the world and became a world reference? no obviously, soviet "engineering" was mostly crap.
First, it's Harkovchanka, not CHarkovchanka.
Second, it's Soviets, not Russians. The vehicle was designed by a number of engineers and scientists from Russian Federation, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova and Ukraine (hence, the name Harkovchanka -- a female from Kharkov).
And third, like it's American counterpart, Harkovchanka turned out to be a failed project, too.
as always, in the comments there is an offended Ukrainian who did not even read the names of those who invented and based on the AT-T. only the Russians can still produce all this, and Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, after the collapse of the USSR. they can't do anything. and without evidence we should believe you? because Russian engineers lived in Kharkov, Kazakhstan and Belarus?
If few ukrainians participated in the creation of this machine, they did not do it of their own free will. They were forced to work for free, subjected to holodomor and beaten with sticks.
It's all Russian, you can't choose when to take credit and when to play ignorant 😅
That vehicle looks cozy AF! I WANT IT!
nice video, want to see more expedition vehicle videos