The Largest And Most Stuck Excavator I’ve Ever Recovered

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2021
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Комментарии • 43 тыс.

  • @JourneywithBrandon
    @JourneywithBrandon 2 года назад +3370

    I didn't think I was going to spend 30 minutes watching people dig an excavator out of a mud pit, but here I am enjoying it more than discovery channel in my hotel.

    • @leonhazlip2163
      @leonhazlip2163 2 года назад +11

      My guess 9hrs 45minutes

    • @maryjohn2988
      @maryjohn2988 2 года назад +14

      Are you married ?

    • @magisterrleth3129
      @magisterrleth3129 2 года назад +30

      It's basically the same content, but with less commercials. The triumph of decentralized content creation at work.

    • @johnathanw.yother2546
      @johnathanw.yother2546 2 года назад +9

      Thinking back to your lowboy crawl a couple vlogs back as I'm binge watching your recoveries got me to thinking about some videos a couple years back of MASSIVE equipment transports where every individual trailer had electric independent steering (& drive)... I wonder how much faster and safer you could get staged if you incorporated low-speed steering on your lowboys to turn the rear of them into sharp turns way faster... I've watched some of your fabrication videos & I'm positive your shop could do the mods & safety speed restrictions completely in-house. Just my penny's worth of possibilities...

    • @jimfetzer996
      @jimfetzer996 2 года назад +3

      It'll take you less than 12 hours

  • @dave9351
    @dave9351 Год назад +61

    21:45 Folks standing amongst those cables gave me the shivers... You Mention 22:11 "A bad time for everyone, if one of these cables breaks"... I'm a former Navy Sailor that went to Nam on an "Oiler" (USS Mispillion AO105) and witnessed (or I should say, saw the aftermath) of an emergency breakaway while refueling an aircraft carrier. The cables we used were heavier than yours and when they snapped... Gawd, it was pretty crazy the damage done to the steel super structure of our ship from the whipping cable.
    Stand clear folks... we heard the horror stories from the crew who'ed been onboard for years and I won't repeat that here, but one can only imagine the destructive power of a snapped cable.

    • @sidneyvanzandt2473
      @sidneyvanzandt2473 4 месяца назад +4

      That is a huge FACT!! Yea, I will not say what would happen to a human body if one of them were to snap, much less the damage to piece of steel..
      I was in the US Navy as well, and heard some stories. I was on the USS Kansas City AOR 3 when we had a emergency breakaway.. Not fun at all..

    • @wojf7604
      @wojf7604 2 месяца назад +3

      You can see that they were just lightly tensioning it, not really pilling yet.

  • @ross.neuberth
    @ross.neuberth 5 месяцев назад +8

    Watching one cat dig out his friend! Nature is beautiful! So heartwarming!

  • @jamiesuejeffery
    @jamiesuejeffery 6 месяцев назад +2

    I'm very late to the show. Sorry about this late, late comment. I have spent, maybe 20 hours behind the controls of an excavator. I have watched, with awe, professionals grab 55 gallon drums filled with broken up concrete, turn them over, shake out the concrete, and put the drum in the recycle bin while I was the supervisor on a demolition project. I'm impressed that they got that machine stuck so well. Most operators can get those unstuck pretty easy (at least to the view of an amature). Edit: that is one big mud hole! No wonder it was stuck!

  • @atifmehuddin3189
    @atifmehuddin3189 2 года назад +877

    I like the way heavy d stops and listen to his crew when they have suggestions. also nobody is shouting everyone is talking to each other. well respected heavy d

    • @anatolilukanov7675
      @anatolilukanov7675 2 года назад +28

      Yea I was surprised that no one was screaming. Everybody was chill and not stressed out.

    • @tarn1135
      @tarn1135 2 года назад +17

      I had that exact same thought a week ago after watching like 40 videos. I mean they could have just edited it all out, but I doubt it.

    • @jasonpycroft2047
      @jasonpycroft2047 2 года назад +3

      10 m

    • @xcynn3rx
      @xcynn3rx 2 года назад +6

      No one has untreated adhd

    • @nicolaablett7790
      @nicolaablett7790 2 года назад +4

      tamam emotional intelligence

  • @aleveraj
    @aleveraj 2 года назад +274

    14:16 That's a clear sign of a great family... wifey's down there, shoveling mud with the guys, helping clear those tracks!! Way to go girl!!

    • @hakarmuhsin6995
      @hakarmuhsin6995 2 года назад +27

      She is in great shape too after all those kids great woman !

    • @ralphalvarez5465
      @ralphalvarez5465 2 года назад +22

      She's laughing and smiling through the whole thing! What a woman!

    • @richardwebster9557
      @richardwebster9557 2 года назад +4

      32hrs. And 23mins.

    • @mtl-ss1538
      @mtl-ss1538 2 года назад +1

      @@richardwebster9557 New Zealand has big logging trucks.
      Gross Masses of around 150-tonne.
      ruclips.net/video/YIXoZzfBJK0/видео.html,ruclips.net/video/VrE877Ut0nI/видео.html&ab_channel=WillBishopTrucksNewZealand
      ruclips.net/video/TIYDVdO0tCQ/видео.html
      -ruclips.net/video/juUb_ymW3PU/видео.html&ab_channel=WoodleysNZ
      ruclips.net/video/vlVsWk5pQ0k/видео.html
      New Zealand- Classic Chip Trucking with 8V92TA-13sp.@ 40t
      ruclips.net/video/g-BnwyBK5Hk/видео.html
      NZ farmers trees been logged,@57ton gross.
      ruclips.net/video/jak7pX6qCiU/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/vzqdGYkH9C8/видео.html&ab_channel=MahoeSawmills
      ruclips.net/video/gjDJupxp3wo/видео.html&ab_channel=PetersonSawmills
      Largest Sawmill in NZ .>ruclips.net/video/iea3LqR37g4/видео.html&ab_channel=RuralDelivery

    • @tomgraham7755
      @tomgraham7755 2 года назад +9

      LDS WIFES raise children and stand buy their husband to help with their chours.

  • @garypetterson2265
    @garypetterson2265 10 часов назад +1

    Just found you guys and subscribed almost immediately. I'll be following your recoveries for as long as you keep pumping them out!

  • @LostMurf
    @LostMurf 10 месяцев назад +14

    I bet this was like a 6.5 hr job, placing those mats correctly probably took most the time.
    Great vid and keep up the awesome work you do!

  • @gubermon5903
    @gubermon5903 11 месяцев назад +313

    You obviously know what you are doing, but the amount of people standing next to cables under tension gives me the willies. Stay safe and keep doing great work!

    • @mrdooman
      @mrdooman 10 месяцев назад +35

      They seemed to have absolutely no respect for if one of those things breaks. I know they're professionals... .but yikes.

    • @proctortoad
      @proctortoad 7 месяцев назад +3

      I was thinking the exact same thing. Wild.

    • @iqcool
      @iqcool 6 месяцев назад +19

      I could tell pretty quick what kind of guy the owner was when he had his entire family with young kids getting close to watch it, he walked the taught pull rope like a tightrope, nobody was wearing any high vis or hardhats, the 450 squeaked constantly indicating it had no grease in any of the pins and was thus very poorly maintained, and the fact he had an ancient Cat D7 to help pull it free. All I'm saying is that I'm not super surprised he got that 450 that stuck.

    • @divineknowledge4607
      @divineknowledge4607 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@iqcoolcup cake wars is very intense too!

    • @PlasticAssasin8
      @PlasticAssasin8 6 месяцев назад

      Safety 10th is how the world was built

  • @WatchJRGo
    @WatchJRGo 2 года назад +2303

    Have you considered just bringing one Toyota Hilux? Should be overkill for that job 🍻

    • @FireofGod7
      @FireofGod7 2 года назад +129

      Youve been watching whistlin diesel to much

    • @ccsmith2937
      @ccsmith2937 2 года назад +11

      I love your channel John Ross. 🙏👍🙏👍

    • @petemcl99
      @petemcl99 2 года назад +86

      Maybe use that Toyota as a swamp mat.🤣🤣🤣

    • @vancecooper9943
      @vancecooper9943 2 года назад +4

      @@ccsmith2937 ur y

    • @vancecooper9943
      @vancecooper9943 2 года назад +3

      @@FireofGod7 is du ft

  • @LongdistanceRider22
    @LongdistanceRider22 7 месяцев назад +7

    Great recovery… love how you use the bucket to offset the weight. ❤

  • @MrTdogg175
    @MrTdogg175 2 года назад +106

    I spotted something I have pretty big respect for, I mean of course I respect the entire hustle and getting people out of these situations and recovering their equipment and vehicles but one small detail I noticed Sparks do was around 15:00 when the other guy was like “let’s get that hook off” and he approached the bucket of sparks excavator, Sparks took his hands completely off the controls so that the machine is completely dead stopped which is a huge and good habit to be in, seen too many people get smacked because someone went to get something out of a bucket and the operator didn’t stop in his tracks and let go of the controls. Awesome job paying as close attention as possible and making sure no one gets hurt in these recoveries man. I’m in the landscaping industry and for those in that industry, in the construction industry, whatever industry you’re in with heavy equipment, always a good habit to have when you have hands on the ground helping you with things so you don’t have to get out of the machine a million times. I love these recovery videos and have been bingeing them since I found your channel, such a cool vibe and I don’t even watch tv anymore cause of this channel and channels like this over the past year that compose their videos to come out like a tv show but better, less commercials, more personal, better content. Can’t beat it. Stay safe and have fun out there Sparks and crew!

    • @blinkerfluid4712
      @blinkerfluid4712 2 года назад +13

      Its even better when they isolate the machine with the safety lever i came up with an idea 15 years ago with a red light green light on top of cab connected to safety lever when red light was on you couldn’t go near machine as soon as operators attention was had and green light was on you could do your business as a groundsman i have seen several companies adopt this over the years.

    • @wernervandermerwe8422
      @wernervandermerwe8422 2 года назад

      @@blinkerfluid4712 should be called blinker light instead

    • @willlesieur4645
      @willlesieur4645 Год назад +3

      Hands off is first rule when bodies approach. Good catch.

    • @BMikeAD
      @BMikeAD Год назад

      Yup, if you're ground crew get a hands up visual and if you're operating honk the fuckin horn at em if they just approach without visual.

    • @crombejyt
      @crombejyt Год назад +2

      I rewatched that part. I see it was the guy with the red shirt. I can also predict what he would say if his arm or another body part of his ever got mangled up... "Oh, that's the way it came from the factory!" Lol! That guy's a hoot!

  • @dustinswartz7540
    @dustinswartz7540 Год назад +388

    I have been a equipment operator my entire life and I have never seen a piece of equipment that stuck yet. Good job men 👏 👍

    • @Jacob-64
      @Jacob-64 Год назад +11

      You haven't been around enough if you think that was bad ....just saying ,suction was the biggest enemy on this job .

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy Год назад +18

      @@Jacob-64 I've never seen a machine that stuck before either and I've been operating machines in mud bogs, swamps and mountain passes.

    • @charlesmayberry2825
      @charlesmayberry2825 Год назад +2

      The only machine I ever had to dig out that was mired in like that was an old Loraine drag shovel in a sand pit that hadn't been active in 4-5 years, so several years of wet seasons unmoved sitting on a sand bed, it had sank completely up to the cabin, To be fair, we were a little less kind with our choice of tools pulling it out. Dozers and skidders chained up together make for one hell of a pull. Still was a lot of digging, and work to get it out. The downside, the engine was not in serviceable condition so we pulled it out as complete dead weight

    • @scottmartin6594
      @scottmartin6594 Год назад +2

      They only suck the undercarriage. I've seen excavators where the whole entire carbody is buried and part of the cab underneath

    • @michaelmaker8169
      @michaelmaker8169 Год назад +2

      Guess some know when to get out when it gets deep 😂.

  • @nicholasmendoza6159
    @nicholasmendoza6159 5 месяцев назад +1

    I love your guys work and you are good at it. Something that will make things a little easier and less risky: Next time try hitting Dozer first, clean up around the site and get the working ground lower. Then Assume the direction in which the water is coming from, dig a deep trech about 4-5 ft deeper than how deep the tractor is sinking. This breaks the hydraulic bond of the water underground, reduces the movement from pumping more water into the wreck. This jist makes it easier to work and reduces the headache of getting in and out to the wreck.

  • @larryspiller6633
    @larryspiller6633 2 года назад +141

    I worked many years in heavy construction. This brought back many memories of those years. Sometimes the hurry to get unstuck made it worse. Mats are your friend, use them, bring more than you think you need from the very beginning. Bring the worst mats in your yard and leave the best ones for crane work. We have destroyed some mats but never left a machine behind.

    • @donjmartelli
      @donjmartelli 2 года назад +2

      That was dug out the excavator was then covered with dirt to make it look like it got stuck. I've seen every stuck you can imagine

    • @larryspiller6633
      @larryspiller6633 2 года назад +2

      @@donjmartelli All of that just for a video? Perhaps..........

    • @joegriffith1954
      @joegriffith1954 2 года назад +2

      Hell on wheels, Germany 73-77

    • @BenSchellinger
      @BenSchellinger 2 года назад +1

      @@donjmartelli how so, just cerious

    • @Augustus0802
      @Augustus0802 2 года назад +1

      2-1?

  • @badasssamurai4954
    @badasssamurai4954 Год назад +84

    Being a ironworker foreman for 30+ years and being around cranes and heavy equipment for my entire life, if I lived anywhere close to you I would sweep floors for free until you brought me on to your team! I absolutely love you're channel and the team you have are amazing!!!

  • @Kingofrestrrooms666
    @Kingofrestrrooms666 6 дней назад

    That guitar music track was friggin awesome ! lol I was rocking out all the way through! 😂

  • @space14605
    @space14605 8 месяцев назад +1

    They're awesome cables. Strong as hell. Snatchblocks n pullys too

  • @robertkahler2
    @robertkahler2 2 года назад +112

    Its the suction of the mud that prevents lifting vehicle out of it. Like stepping in gooey mud and your shoe gets sucked off your foot. I learned a trick from a crusty old maintenance Master Sergeant when I was stationed in Germany. He had fabricated these long pipe sections that he could connect to an industrial air compressor. Drive the pipes under the stuck vehicle then blast air through them. The compressed air breaks the suction. We had an M113 that was stuck bigger that Stuttgart. Even tried an AVLS (M60 tank chassis based bridge launcher) to no avail. So this MSG pulls up, rigs up his pipes, blasts air under the M113, and we pull (winch) it out with a 5-ton wheeled wrecker. I don't know why I've never seen this technique used on any of these recovery videos, but hope this gives someone else an idea. But if someone patents it, I want royalties.

    • @Bill23799
      @Bill23799 2 года назад +5

      That is a great idea. Haha. been a long time since I heard the phrase " Bigger than Stuttgart ".
      Was is Los? Der hund ist Los. I was stationed at Rivers Barracks ( The Zoo ) 1979 to 1983.
      A Btry 3rd Bn 79th FA Lance Missile unit.

    • @robertkahler2
      @robertkahler2 2 года назад +2

      @@Bill23799 10th Engineer Schweinfurt, then Engineer Brigade Bamburg, 3ID, 91-94.

    • @jamiedarr4114
      @jamiedarr4114 2 года назад +1

      Ein bier bitte. Oberusel. 85-88.

    • @cliffcoburn
      @cliffcoburn 2 года назад +1

      A nifty idea!

    • @dhajicek
      @dhajicek 2 года назад +3

      Good point. When the English fought the French at Agincourt in 1415, the mud suction gave the English the victory. The English wore cloth, the French plate armor. If a French knight fell down in the muck, he could never get up as he was suctioned down into the mud. So an Englishman could just come over and stab the Frenchman through an appropriate hole. If a Frenchman fell face first, he would drown in his own armor. Mud can be nasty stuff.

  • @brunorigo
    @brunorigo Год назад +120

    I wouldve loved to see some pressure washing and oiling of that thing

    • @squirrel8185
      @squirrel8185 Год назад +14

      I was thinking the same thing at the end. I was like the job isn't done until those tracks have been cleared of debris.

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Месяц назад

      Go watch the pressure washing guy.

    • @brunorigo
      @brunorigo Месяц назад

      @@davidelliott5843 haha you're right, I should

  • @mad151maxx4
    @mad151maxx4 8 месяцев назад +1

    Love this video. I have been working in the ground for 35+years, water,sewer,drain, gas, etc piping. Plus bridges, tunnels, etc.. in boston on "the big dig" , Tobin bridge, etc... I HAVE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING THAT BAD, buried.

  • @wesbarker3910
    @wesbarker3910 10 часов назад

    Incredible video of a NEVER GIVEUP TEAM - exciting and impressive use of equipment. All I can say is WOW!

  • @jimmcculloch3786
    @jimmcculloch3786 9 дней назад

    Hey guys, watching from the UK! Wow, what you do and have fun doing it. The friendship and comerarderie is amazing, and the videos are not bad either, lol. Love the way you included the fella and his lovely family. Take care and keep postin - James :)

  • @bryanworthen9978
    @bryanworthen9978 2 года назад +225

    That’s crazy! I literally was part of the team who built the reservoir like 200 yards west of there back in 2011. We sunk a D6 up to the cab when we were digging for the dam embankment (among some other gear). That area has some of the worst clay, silt and liquefaction that I have ever seen in my life! I have a literally been stuck and lost boots from walking through it.

    • @warismysoul
      @warismysoul 2 года назад +5

      chek this one ruclips.net/video/APNhASCpdxY/видео.html
      . after those guys this guys is a childs xDDD

    • @QarsherskiyRadio
      @QarsherskiyRadio 2 года назад +2

      Wow

    • @warismysoul
      @warismysoul 2 года назад +2

      @@QarsherskiyRadio as i told ;)

    • @danielw7060
      @danielw7060 2 года назад +4

      @@Jimmy-1904 sure, i can sign your hat

    • @QarsherskiyRadio
      @QarsherskiyRadio 2 года назад +2

      Here in Bahariterra we have quicksand

  • @maxnuccio2440
    @maxnuccio2440 Год назад +133

    I feel like a time lapse of the whole event from one high angle on jobs like this would be really cool. Throw it in at the end so we can see how the whole job went down in a minute or two ;)

    • @gubermon5903
      @gubermon5903 11 месяцев назад

      Great work for a drone

    • @The81ubb
      @The81ubb 3 месяца назад

      ​@@gubermon5903 a drone? Never I need to bee in the air for hours

  • @azizhachimi8744
    @azizhachimi8744 5 месяцев назад +2

    You HUYS are the REAL deal...I like watching "Matt's off road recovery" recoveries, but you are on a league of your own...The Heavy Duty Stuff that everyone likes to watch! New subscriber & fan from Montreal, Canada

  • @joewhitenton2374
    @joewhitenton2374 4 месяца назад

    Ok - just discovered this channel 2 hours ago - Yes, I completely hooked.

  • @sammureno6862
    @sammureno6862 2 года назад +303

    That was one of the most awesome things I have ever seen. You pretty much risked your own Excavator to get the other one out and saved one man's family of their livelihood. A big hug to you and your crew.

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 2 года назад +117

    You should consider buying some anti-whip blankets. You lay them over cables and straps to absorb the initial energy if they break. A broken cable almost cut my truck in half and I will not pull again without them. Cheap insurance

    • @rickybobby9005
      @rickybobby9005 2 года назад +10

      I agree just looking out would hate to see somthing happen to anyone

    • @angelo_giachetti
      @angelo_giachetti 2 года назад +29

      Cringing at this whole operation.

    • @todtalk3912
      @todtalk3912 2 года назад +12

      add to that he was in an open seat/cockpit, no door or cage even not that itd prob help anyway. yeah I agree, def must have when doing super heavy stuff like this.

    • @desmond-hawkins
      @desmond-hawkins 2 года назад +9

      @@angelo_giachetti Same. The cameraman between the two vehicles just feet from the tensioned cable… if it snapped he would have been in pieces.

    • @jonka1
      @jonka1 2 года назад +8

      I agree but then this video would not be a vehicle for his overwhelming macho self image. Everything is about him and his self image. The camera angles , the music, the "aren't I wonderful", everything is about him.

  • @user-iw3rm7kj6n
    @user-iw3rm7kj6n 3 месяца назад

    RECENTLY RETIRED FROM CONSTRUCTION, in this video, I saw COMMON SENSE EXCEED EDUCATION in a few minutes than l saw in 50 years. I admire the way he kept a cool ATTITUDE.

  • @gbhrps
    @gbhrps 2 года назад +117

    Damn! First time to your channel and I'm impressed! This 72 year old retired teacher would have you as a neighbour in a heart beat. No! I don't need a backhoe operator... but a man with his head screwed on right... who knows how to treat others .. and what is really important in life ... and who works hard ..... with honesty ... you are my kind of human being! Stay safe , sir!

  • @user-wf7fl3mg7x
    @user-wf7fl3mg7x 6 дней назад +1

    100 hours, good luck Diesel brothers watched all your shows loved it , Iron Mike

  • @dwaynemurphy814
    @dwaynemurphy814 2 года назад +122

    Matts is what saved the machine, it would've keep digging in without them. I did pipeline work for several years all through swamps, we used matts to do everything, we had one to fall in a sinkhole and the operator had to climbed out the top lid, it went down that fast like quicksand, took 3 days to dig it out, and 3 excavators and a dozer. Fun times. Enjoy the videos

    • @narceavery2398
      @narceavery2398 2 года назад +1

      45 hours

    • @caseygiles1368
      @caseygiles1368 2 года назад +1

      I pipelined too and we used hella mats through the swampy shit

    • @dwaynemurphy814
      @dwaynemurphy814 2 года назад +2

      @@caseygiles1368 truthfully, I don't even know what a hella mat is, I worked for NC natural gas in the 80s and 90s, all our pipeline went through the worst possible land they could use for a right away. I really enjoyed pipeline work but NC doesn't pay well.

    • @lgv2069
      @lgv2069 2 года назад +4

      Yeah I worked with Matt too, great guy. Always helped with getting out of a jam.

    • @shodpell3365
      @shodpell3365 2 года назад +1

      42hours18 minutes

  • @abactisbos
    @abactisbos 8 месяцев назад

    awesome that you recover the hardwood of the swamp mats, that stuff is incredible

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Месяц назад

      Why would they leave any equipment. It’s expensive and extremely useful.

  • @brentcoburn9818
    @brentcoburn9818 7 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic team. You're one hell of a Boss and Mate for your crew.

  • @michaelmayo3127
    @michaelmayo3127 2 года назад +44

    Well, in the army engineering corps the general thesis is, -you never pull a vehicle, with a vehicle lighter that the one you wise to pull. That could well be a sound thesis. Great and entertaining video.Glad to see the guy got his digger back.

    • @mouaxiong8618
      @mouaxiong8618 2 года назад

      With enough pulleys I've seen 10 men pull over a 10 ton army truck.

    • @michaelmayo3127
      @michaelmayo3127 2 года назад +2

      @@mouaxiong8618 With the right vector angle it can be done with 2.

    • @pr5721
      @pr5721 2 года назад +2

      With two chinooks you can pull dam neer anything out hooah

    • @michaelmayo3127
      @michaelmayo3127 2 года назад

      @kd78orangerangerpete The army corps of engineering, do most defiantly work in a real-world. But, they do things by numbers and not brute-force.

    • @michaelmayo3127
      @michaelmayo3127 2 года назад +1

      @Yippee Skippy Using blokes only increases the pull ability. It doesn't change the weight of the pulling vehicle (the anchor point). A 5 ton truck doesn't become a 30 ton armoured vehicle.

  • @brookieant
    @brookieant 2 года назад +145

    I did not think that was coming out but well done as Matt's Off Road Recovery says ( YOU GOT UM OUT ) 🤣🤣👍🏼

  • @AndyPierce-lg2xk
    @AndyPierce-lg2xk 5 дней назад

    8:30 can't believe you guys got it out so quick.

  • @danb2936
    @danb2936 3 месяца назад

    Amazing rescue...but the amount of people still near the cables under full pull is crazy...they'll rip you to pieces faster than a blink...
    either use weighted bags on them or double the distance on the people ❤❤❤

  • @robertpearson8546
    @robertpearson8546 10 месяцев назад +160

    It's incredible that your cables never break and kill everyone near them.

    • @Touay.
      @Touay. 10 месяцев назад +3

      indeed ... flying bits of shackle!

    • @butchgreene
      @butchgreene 8 месяцев назад +24

      Only takes once...and you'll never see that video.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@butchgreene Happened to one of my ancestors in the 19th Century, a tug boat captain in Portsmouth UK. Cut in half when the hawse broke.

    • @TheBinaryHappiness
      @TheBinaryHappiness 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@JelMain that's a very curious piece of info. it's cool that you can trace your lineage that far back, really gives you a healthier perspective on life
      i know that my grand grand father war a blacksmith in a Siberian village, early 1900s, and he got kicked in the chest by a horse during horse shoe-ing process

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheBinaryHappiness Those were the days. The family was prominent in the town, which stopped for his funeral. Although we can't trace the lineage before c1760, their trade indicates they were from Orkney, in the clan which was headed by St Magnus, and from there the Sagas go back to c500CE, including such lovely people of Eric Bloodaxe. On the other side, with one uncertainty during the French Revolution when identities were fluid, we go back to Rome - but then again, so does much of Europe!

  • @LuisHernandez-nb4nv
    @LuisHernandez-nb4nv 2 года назад +64

    Heavy D, from previous experience recovering Abrams Tanks and other similar heavy equipment from the mus. I have pumped air into the belly with hoses to counteract the mud's suction power and was sucessfull. put that one on the log for the next recovery!

    • @pfa2000
      @pfa2000 2 года назад

      Challenger 2 doesn't get stuck 😉

    • @peterlanum
      @peterlanum 2 года назад

      Dynamite was the cure when it was available.

    • @jcims
      @jcims 2 года назад

      Man that's a fantastic idea, sounds like the voice of experience.

  • @2GK-MOTO
    @2GK-MOTO 5 месяцев назад +1

    You guys are a bad ass, and I love watching your guises channel and you inspire me to start a recovery company of my own

  • @JamesStreet-tp1vb
    @JamesStreet-tp1vb 4 месяца назад

    Take the dozer, lift the front end with the blade and go forward to get the tracks spinning and let it dig a hole, then hook the winch to the stuck equipment. Its what we used to do when moving rail cars that derailed. It gives the dozer a back stop or a chock to brace against to keep the winch from pulling it backward.

  • @kennyfields5043
    @kennyfields5043 2 года назад +68

    I really appreciate you guys. I'm a 66 year old African American who just love watching you guys. I love the respect and since of fun you guys have. I also like the way that you look out for people that are less fortunate. You guys are the epitome of doing the right thing and good fortune comes to you. Love it.

    • @lauramason97
      @lauramason97 Год назад +2

      That was awesome and you helped the regular working hard family out of something that no one else could have! Excellent job and team work and excellent planning! I ❤️ watching this stuff!

    • @jw2par
      @jw2par Год назад +6

      Same here , I'm 55 tho. I had a chance back around 88 or 89 to go to school for free to learn to operate heavy equipment. They had a program here in Atlanta that gave you free lunch and paid for your bus fare to and from school . I was 18 or 19 at the time . My mom talked me out of it 😐. Always wished I would have went .

    • @blackandbluecamaro2877
      @blackandbluecamaro2877 Год назад +12

      Why do you state your race?🤔

    • @kchididdy
      @kchididdy Год назад +6

      @@blackandbluecamaro2877 Hey there! I'm a bisexual Iranian dog with dryer lint in my trousers. Just dropping by to say that I sure love your work! Take care!

    • @damkayaker
      @damkayaker Год назад

      @@blackandbluecamaro2877 - Thought the same ... why is that necessary to say?

  • @ellijahsmith4445
    @ellijahsmith4445 2 года назад +86

    Amazes me that people will stand next to a loaded cable and not think about what happens if it snaps.

    • @crazymuffinstv9024
      @crazymuffinstv9024 2 года назад +2

      Those chains are made for a lot more force than their machines can even produce. When done properly there isn’t really a threat in that regard

    • @ChaseLandMgmt
      @ChaseLandMgmt 2 года назад +23

      @@crazymuffinstv9024 I don’t care if it’s 5/8” grade 100. Always have an exit plan and cover. I’ve seen top of the line rigging fail, it happens.

    • @99PMoon
      @99PMoon 2 года назад +6

      I would have least put heavy moving blankets over the lines

    • @stevenbartholomew9749
      @stevenbartholomew9749 2 года назад +3

      @@99PMoon i dont think a moving blanket will stop a wire of that caliber.... it works great for small chains and ratchet straps though. But these cables they are hauling are heavy AF

    • @TheHeroPercy
      @TheHeroPercy 2 года назад +2

      @@99PMoon yeah nah failure of this kind of material can basically cut someone in half.

  • @jim.franklin
    @jim.franklin 9 дней назад

    Excellent recovery, good attitude by everyone - for me, few heart pounding moments - people a bit close to some of the cables when rigged, I have seen 12,000Ib pull cable snap recovering a stuck Land Rorver, took out 2ft thick tree - have also witnessed the after effects of a cable snap and what it does to a human body - not pleasant. The fella in the redt shirt kept running under the main boom when operating - madness. However, really good job, everyone safe, mission accomplished and a great video. Maybe you should look at buying a M88A2 Hercules...pulling machine on steroids.

  • @flashanddancedj
    @flashanddancedj 2 дня назад

    I know I’m late to the party here I’m gonna say 40 hours at the 52 second mark…
    I know a lot of editing goes into these however less than a day wow… I’m amazed

  • @davep6977
    @davep6977 2 года назад +65

    I'm sitting here going come on, come on. Turn that turret on the 450 around, the counter weight is dragging and use that bucket to push. Soon as I thought that, he did it YEAH

  • @ciaranxr8
    @ciaranxr8 2 года назад +41

    On next episode 5 ton wrecker gets beefed up with a stupid amount of pull power and is built with solid front bar that doesn't bend when anchored..it would be good to see some of the military stuff getting rebuilt for heavy duty recovery

    • @kennethissac9619
      @kennethissac9619 2 года назад +1

      19 hr 45 minutes

    • @allencunningham9615
      @allencunningham9615 2 года назад +1

      I like this idea, would be really cool to see some of the military trucks getting a little bit of a make over for heavy rescue/recovery.

  • @FranklinCogburn-zv1ft
    @FranklinCogburn-zv1ft 23 дня назад

    I'm thinking this one might take a couple of days! Teamwork makes the dream work!

  • @lauralauren6432
    @lauralauren6432 Месяц назад

    This MUDFLOOD once buried the whole World. The FLOOD. 30 FEET. The covered Old World buildings with levels with arched Windows and Entrance s gives it. As all tunnels. They just raised the street level. The dust of "Wild west" was dry Mud next to Palaces and State Capitol buildings.

  • @jacobmoore6858
    @jacobmoore6858 2 года назад +58

    I work on excavators at a dealer. That machine needs a pump/ work group adjustment. Not enough pressure going to the travel motors or work group. A simple turn of a couple reliefs would have made that recovery much easier.

    • @srjr2531
      @srjr2531 2 года назад +1

      So your saying that the track that moves it forward and reverse had minimized power and by tweaking some, ; valves? Would have gave it power to travel faster ?

    • @ironman-sp9fg
      @ironman-sp9fg 2 года назад +3

      That's possibility crossed my mind too! The turning power looked way to weak

    • @rolannolan9336
      @rolannolan9336 2 года назад +5

      @@srjr2531 That is exactly how it works

    • @srjr2531
      @srjr2531 2 года назад +2

      @@rolannolan9336 man this is a major life hack for anyone in that industry lol can never learn too much here on the good old RUclips hopefully guy saw your post !

    • @jacobkrogstad9122
      @jacobkrogstad9122 2 года назад +7

      @@srjr2531 proper adjustment is what he is referring to. It is not a life hack. You will regret turn that screw with out knowing what you are working with or the tools to view your tampering

  • @MarcJMusic
    @MarcJMusic 2 года назад +144

    Don't know why this popped up on my feed but it was both the most stressful and satisfying thing I've watched in a while!! I'll be subbing to this channel!

    • @braydenlangan722
      @braydenlangan722 2 года назад +3

      Lmao that’s same idk why it popped up

    • @thebeardyyc
      @thebeardyyc 2 года назад +2

      There’s an old timer that does similar videos just not as well edited

    • @gaillinhproductions9227
      @gaillinhproductions9227 2 года назад +2

      Yeah my randomly came up and now im watching through it im here for the long run

    • @BitsOfInterest
      @BitsOfInterest 2 года назад +4

      Same for me, I ignored it a few times but finally clicked it. Here's why:
      1) you love your equipment as much as your dog; wouldn't you jump in a swamp to save it?
      2) you're probably subbed to AvE. If not, then you should.
      3) very high production quality, camera and editing.

    • @cmikesmith664
      @cmikesmith664 2 года назад +2

      Same

  • @Smitty134
    @Smitty134 Месяц назад

    The discipline of the crew is impeccable.

  • @davekolp4552
    @davekolp4552 10 месяцев назад

    Seems like you guys are my kinda guys! Good job. It's fun to watch. Also, who doesn't like heavy machinery?

  • @peterlanum
    @peterlanum 2 года назад +69

    We have 4 450's they didn't come with much tracking power. You can multiple your towing power by hooking to the top of the track pads and not have to rely on the drives as much. Good job guys Northern Minnesota here and when we're stuck at 20 below it adds another twist.

  • @shanevermij4780
    @shanevermij4780 2 года назад +6

    I admire your perseverance, I had the oppertunity to see a 30 ton longer track cat excuvator being salvaged out of marsh, tiring job. You guy have guts.

  • @Qgal5kap123
    @Qgal5kap123 3 месяца назад

    I bet I'm not the only farmer with Moraine soils, literally salivating over the sight of that clay.

  • @robertbolino9052
    @robertbolino9052 8 дней назад

    Have you guys ever seen air bags work in action, live? The work you do you need to own some or rent some!

  • @TheSmreeder
    @TheSmreeder 2 года назад +126

    Ya'll must have the best karma in the world doing a recovery like that and helping out the cera gordo dude out just out of kindness.
    Many blessings , SMR

    • @828enigma6
      @828enigma6 2 года назад +7

      God has richly blessed him. It is only appropriate that he share his blessings.

    • @andrewjohnston7688
      @andrewjohnston7688 2 года назад +2

      I don't think it took any longer then 3hrs 45mins

    • @Skagzi1la
      @Skagzi1la 2 года назад +7

      To be fair, he knew he'd have some great content out of the deal, but regardless, absolutely good karma

    • @rickybailey7123
      @rickybailey7123 2 года назад +2

      If I had it I would help 2 I love doing that stuff but my Tahoe and Toyota truck just won't do it !!! Like go to work or pull that out with all them big ass toys no brainer I'm playing till it's done 100% and having a great time !!

    • @waterheaterservices
      @waterheaterservices 2 года назад +1

      He ain't no Hindu

  • @PRC533
    @PRC533 2 года назад +15

    As a safety guy who has investigated too many trench collapses, these conditions really make me nervous with the combination of unconsolidated ground and water plus a lot of vibration from heavy equipment. As the video showed, those sides were very unstable and prone to sloughing. I was happy to see one side of the hole looked to be sloped back pretty well, the other side was a bit too vertical for my liking. It might be worth installing some shoring for projects like this in the future, but It seemed like everyone was aware of the hazards for the most part. You guys did good work and showed excellent communication. It's always a pleasure to see a group of professionals at work.

  • @stevenbass732
    @stevenbass732 7 месяцев назад

    I wondered how long it would take him to decide to use the excavator boom to push instead of trying to pull. Lol

  • @justinherdman87
    @justinherdman87 Месяц назад

    2 short chains about 5" longer then width of the tracks, hooks on ends.. hook them across the track, (like a snow chain on a tire) then you got a place too pull from on each side, and it will help get track moving if you hook them on top of track in middle, and pull from them gentle..
    i got a old Big old jd 4## somtin excavator, old thing.. big machine. Had a lazy track.. got hung up and stuck. Sunk.
    short 2.5 ft' chain with grab hooks, hooked across track, from inside too outside. then hook the pulling cable on too middle of them) and will help get track spinning, and or machine rolling- good pulling spot if cant hook onto the undercarriage.

  • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
    @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics 2 года назад +623

    This was like LetsDig18 and Matt's Off Road Recovery in one show... Awesome 😁😁

  • @andresdelgado7008
    @andresdelgado7008 2 года назад +35

    This looks like a very rewarding career. If I was 30 years yunger I would have been looking you up.

  • @wellidk556
    @wellidk556 9 дней назад

    21 hours just under a day but I've never seen anything like this ever

  • @Smokedout.
    @Smokedout. 6 месяцев назад

    You guys should get ahold of AL Quiring from Highway thru hell , he has a awesome way of rigging up and pulling out big equipment like you are messing with. But if you could get the shackles and stuff that he uses,it would help tremendously. Al Quiring towing in Canada I think. Anyway good job Holmes!

  • @gibbethoskins8621
    @gibbethoskins8621 3 месяца назад

    Would be a good idea to put weight dampeners on those winch cables... One of those let's go and comes your way it's game over. With Weight dampeners they'll drop straight to the ground, instead sending you to the next life.

  • @algernoncalydon3430
    @algernoncalydon3430 2 года назад +14

    Had a coworker stick a similar excavator in a bog hole, here in interior Alaska. Once he moved onto that ground it began to sink and it was above the tracks before he could rotate the arm around and claw free. It took a 980 hooked to a 40 ton haul truck to reef it out. Took about four hours.

  • @Superman-tw3gm
    @Superman-tw3gm 2 года назад +40

    I always liked Heavy D’s visions for trucks, but I like him even more now that I know he listens to Tech N9ne

  • @buellrod
    @buellrod 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think the biggest and the best question is. What would that excavator even be doing out there? Nothing going on. The excavator be doing out there there's nothing going on

    • @iaingrieve9598
      @iaingrieve9598 8 месяцев назад

      He said he was cleaning up brush... lots of farmers use them they aren't just for construction

    • @buellrod
      @buellrod 8 месяцев назад

      There is no brush

    • @iaingrieve9598
      @iaingrieve9598 8 месяцев назад

      @@buellrod what do you call all those trees on the back side of the hole? He was probably moving between some patches of trees and found a soft spot. It's really not that hard to see what happened if you use your brain a little

  • @kamurray67
    @kamurray67 5 месяцев назад

    It was a Marine Corps vehicle. They get factory seconds machinery because we know a Marine is just going to tear it up anyway. That is why the Air Force and the Navy gets all the nice stuff.

  • @PaulPassarelli
    @PaulPassarelli 2 года назад +44

    So, what was the 'owner' trying to do when he got stuck? What signals did he miss that allowed him to keep digging when he was in a hole he couldn't emerge from? I have a backhoe and I don't want to make the same errors while I'm digging my borrow pit.

    • @devindefelice1879
      @devindefelice1879 2 года назад +9

      Don't dig a circle around yourself.

    • @Gilmore304
      @Gilmore304 2 года назад +1

      Don’t watch or listen these dudes first off

    • @devonm5037
      @devonm5037 2 года назад +6

      Diggin down in what you think is only "soft" ground. you start seeing water seepage on either side get out. the ground youre digging is compact and solid but as you dig down and water seeps out from the sides in youll get stuck if you dont get out ASAP. Pretty sure this guy was in a dry area rain happened and then didnt back out and boom stuck.

    • @Tre16
      @Tre16 2 года назад +2

      Get trained or hire a professional lol

    • @WideTrashAttack
      @WideTrashAttack 2 года назад +5

      dont dig straight down, never dig straight down

  • @michaelmeacham8266
    @michaelmeacham8266 2 года назад +15

    This was Great! I love it when you do heavy duty problem solving like this. Now you need to do a one hour show on having an industrial level Blacksmith repair the 5 ton's bumper. Also, five ton wreckers are cool but if want awesome, you need to get an Army 10 ton wrecker or the heavy tank recovery vehicle. VTR M88. The M88 is designed to rescue 50 ton tanks, has a huge winch and a spade blade on the front to anchor it while doing so. You will need a dragon wagon, (super duty Army low boy and 10 ton tractor) to move it around. It's not too road friendly, even though it has rubber on steel treads. I think it weighs around 80 tons.

  • @shaunluetich7063
    @shaunluetich7063 5 месяцев назад

    I feel like a better competition for the viewers would have been 'Guess what shade of red my arms will be by the time i get this excavator out".

  • @bronco1199
    @bronco1199 29 дней назад

    That's a lot more dangerous than it looks. Big hilti chipper, hand held, cordless, shovel bit.
    Ya got 8 billion dollars worth of equipment and digging by hand like its WW1

  • @yuwish3394
    @yuwish3394 2 года назад +27

    I appreciate the patience and professionalism here. Nicely Done !!!

  • @dianejensen9953
    @dianejensen9953 2 года назад +13

    I love watching you guys do recovery I find it really fascinating and I got excited when you finally get the whatever stuck unstuck that is like the coolest feeling ever but I can imagine what you guys feel when you finally get it unstuck yourselves

  • @russellearley4442
    @russellearley4442 13 дней назад

    I worked at huntington power plant for 35 years. You could use two big excavators or one big one and a big 1" winch. Maybe 6 hours. Youre just outside of town going up the canyon?

  • @larryk9
    @larryk9 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think a skilled operator could have got that JD out by itself. At most another excavator to help. I’m not sure why after digging the tracks out the guys didn’t rotate the machine perpendicular to its tracks, lift up 1 track at a time, try and run it with no weight on it. Probably could have got it mostly cleaned out to where you could track and pull or push the machine out under its own power without using the other 3 pieces of equipment. Nonetheless, they got it out, but I think they used more effort than needed.

  • @cynicalpsycho5574
    @cynicalpsycho5574 2 года назад +101

    I don't know if anyone has mentioned it but I would place a few heavy rubber mats on the wires and slings when pulling mate...
    Always plan for worst case, if they snapped there was several people within "severing" reach.
    Just a suggestion, loved the vid and mad respect for your work ethic and the way you treat everyone.

    • @johnt9911
      @johnt9911 2 года назад +1

      They wouldn't severe anybody in half all they would do is hurt them in a royal fashion the only way I know this is cause I watched an episode of mythbusters that showed that snapping wire will not cut someone in half it'll hurt them like I said but there would be no severing its all a myth but I do see where ur coming from

    • @hawkfeatheraviation3465
      @hawkfeatheraviation3465 2 года назад +3

      @@johnt9911 Oh yes they DO INDEEP snap, and can turn people into hamburger. Myth Busters needs their bubble pooped...

    • @johnt9911
      @johnt9911 2 года назад

      I never said they don't snap what I meant was they don't cut people in half like u see in the movies

    • @danielmcewen2316
      @danielmcewen2316 2 года назад

      One hour 20 minutes

    • @joerain22
      @joerain22 2 года назад +1

      @@johnt9911 not true, had a wire rail, same general size they use here, snap in a crash and nearly cut a 10 year old in half. Died.

  • @lorimodesitt4259
    @lorimodesitt4259 2 года назад +33

    Great job, looked like a lot of fun. I like all the "Factory" stuff on the big truck specially the bumper and tail lights, lol. Y'all are great, hope to meet y'all some day

    • @TEIN-qi3ie
      @TEIN-qi3ie Год назад

      I died at "factory rust"

  • @canada2241
    @canada2241 2 часа назад

    Little behind the times...28 hours....38 minutes lol love the vids!

  • @danieldupasquier1168
    @danieldupasquier1168 5 месяцев назад

    Large unit looks like down pressure should be checked possibly at the valve bank, whether it's a bad check valve or worn packing in the cylinders.

  • @markgriffin4888
    @markgriffin4888 2 года назад +30

    I knew that the owner would be working his ring off, but I wasn't expecting his misses to be there shoveling dirt out of the tracks aswell 👍👍👍👍👍👍 to her!!!!!!

    • @scoutlife.7765
      @scoutlife.7765 2 года назад +2

      Yeah thats alot of money to lose in the family business that she could possibly get 🤣

  • @moonpatrol9717
    @moonpatrol9717 2 года назад +16

    Watching this reminds me of the time I got the family Volvo stuck in my kid's sandpit. I pretty much had to employ similar tactics as you guys.

  • @quarter-py4nr
    @quarter-py4nr 2 месяца назад

    Would installing well points be a viable option? Great video as always!

  • @kevinwilliams5098
    @kevinwilliams5098 9 месяцев назад

    See that guy with the sleeves on,everything getting cooked

  • @mikes78
    @mikes78 2 года назад +24

    I think the easiest way to do this is to look at the angle of the shadows in the video. Given that there is just short of 15 hours of daylight in Utah at the moment that means that given that the sun advances 15' for every hour, the sun's arc is 225' at this time of year.
    If you look at timestamps 00:20 & 27:37 you can see the shadows as about 20 degrees off vertical to one side, and well over 60', maybe even as much as 70' to the other side towards the end of the video, lets call it 70'. That gives us a 90' Arc, which gives us 6 hours. But given that it's a crapshoot guessing angles for the start and end like this, it could be anywhere from 5h30, through to 7 hours for the recovery.
    I'm calling it 5h40m

    • @delta929
      @delta929 2 года назад +5

      What the fuck?

    • @Clovethelightrespectthepower
      @Clovethelightrespectthepower 2 года назад +7

      This guy could ruin a morning shit with all this reading

    • @ronaldharris6569
      @ronaldharris6569 2 года назад

      Take a deep breath and a sip of something cold and just breathe

    • @mikes78
      @mikes78 2 года назад +2

      Some say "why?", I say "why not?".
      At worst I'm totally wrong and look stupid. At best I might be in the ballpark. It's all a game right?

  • @jeffmcdonald2110
    @jeffmcdonald2110 2 года назад +5

    When I first saw it, I thought 4 hours tops. Just not really that stuck. Another day in the office for us marine guys. After watching you guys, I'm thinking you spent closer to 8. A 12 ton machine with 30" wide tracks and no blade will make your life much better. In the future pick the sides up rather than toes and break the suction first. Saves tons of shovel work. Dig a short flat spot to walk up on mats without toeing up and then push yourself out. Could have been out the day he did it. Best part is , you got 3 million plus views.

  • @robertmckissick7068
    @robertmckissick7068 2 месяца назад

    Bad ass 1963 peterbuilt with a huge boom for pulling out armored military vehicles

  • @americanpatriot430
    @americanpatriot430 11 дней назад

    Where did yall get the crane mats? I work at a mill that makes those same kind of crane mats. Might could get yall a good deal when you need more.

  • @DaleDirt
    @DaleDirt 2 года назад +12

    Dude , That was amazing . I am sure the owner lost , many sleepless nights wondering if his machine was still there or continued sinking . I am glad you guys have a niche .

  • @lgannawa
    @lgannawa Год назад +8

    If there ever was a person who found their calling, it’s this man. He’s entirely too good at these huge problems.

  • @chadpyett6441
    @chadpyett6441 8 месяцев назад

    Good job gentlemen as always entertaining and you got the job done no harm no foul

  • @NipItInTheBud100
    @NipItInTheBud100 4 месяца назад

    Track machines don’t get stuck as easily as wheeled machines but when they do get stuck…it’s usually a doozy!

  • @donniepitts1646
    @donniepitts1646 2 года назад +31

    This was great. It was neat to see that guys family out there digging with everyone. They were grateful for the answered call of help

  • @Blade-Waltz
    @Blade-Waltz 2 года назад +25

    Holy cow, that's the thickest Yankum rope I've ever seen + the soft shackle.

    • @JeffreyBNL
      @JeffreyBNL 2 года назад +1

      Welker farms also has some pretty thick stuff

    • @bkuker
      @bkuker 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, I am used to a "big" soft shackle being as big around as my finger, not my forearm. Wow. :-D

  • @julienajarry
    @julienajarry 6 месяцев назад

    Epic videos. Have you guys thought about comms?

  • @bernardstine6909
    @bernardstine6909 6 дней назад +1

    14.5 hours and two cases of water and 12 tocos