Well i used to operate z snowblower like this they usually range around 600 hp to 2500 hp and we piled the snow as high as possible around 120 to 200 feet all depends on the engine type , i used to operate a contant with a 1000 hp engine we rented an larue ( similar to the one in the vid ) it had an v12 at 2000 hp
No hurricanes here, I'll deal with snow !! Just kidding, we all have our challenges with weather !! I've been to Florida, my folks used to winter there, it's absolutely beautiful !!
Interesting to see how others do this, I work winter times on a snow dump site. A big pile of snow and lorrys drives on it and dumps over edge, we just levels the pile and water on so it carrys better. Now edge is about 25m high and rising
Has anyone thought about compressing blocks of this stuff to stack near a water treatment plant? Even with all the road muck it's the cleanest water out there, and can be spray insulated to keep for a few weeks after the storms end.
Fortunately in southern Alberta we get warm Chinook winds that can melt 2' of snow in a single day. But the chinooks don't come when "we want them to", they come when "they" want to. So the chinooks don't help us get rid of snow every time a huge snow dump occurs. But over the course of one winter we can get 4-8 beneficial chinooks when we need 'em. It's almost miraculous to watch it happen.
Why don't we transport this snow down along the border west where the runoff could eventually hit the Colorado River and dump into Lake Powell and Mead? Think about what 50 truck loads a day would help out and truck driving jobs?
I reckon a few truckloads is about Australia's annual snowfall :O . Just kidding but snow like that isn't seen down under. They have snow machines to make snow not to get rid of them.
“Up until the end of the 1980s, snow was simply dumped into the St. Lawrence River, polluting the river system with salt and gravel. Now, a third of the snow goes into Montreal's sewer system, and is treated along with the rest of Montreal's sewage before being released into the river."😀
1/8/23.....I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, which has Lake Erie on it's northern shore, and Cleveland is usually pummeled by "Lake Effect", winter storms, very often huge snowfalls, but not as bad a Buffalo New York. There they remove snow and push it into Lake Erie, to melt into the water when the temperatures rise. Other places they create monster sized snow mountains in parking lots of defunct shopping plazas. The snow starts out sort of white, but pollution from car exhausts, soon blackens it. The black soot pollution prevents the snow from melting quickly as it act as insulation. However I have seen videos of the melting,....and it takes most of a whole summer, to completely melt.
hi, my friend , thanks for share your information about snow removal in the USA, there is also same problem for snow in winter there. just like you said, yes , the snow pile will cover dust, and melt until summer, have a nice day!😀
The dirt seen on snow piles is not from pollution, it's the dust and dirt and road grime and rocks that the plows pick up that's inside the snow, as the snow melts the dirt and debris stays on the surface and accumulates, until it looks like a dirt pile. And it actually does not insulate the piles unless there is a _large_ amount of dirt, it can actually speed up the melting process when the sun is out because it absorbs the sun's light and converts it to heat which melts the underlying ice. There are studies showing that pollution _is_ causing this issue on glaciers, the light film of soot melts the ice far faster than clean ice, because clean ice and snow reflects light extremely well.
@@TheExplosiveGuy I agree with most of what you say, however, when I was growing up in Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1950s & 60s,. the city air/atmosphere was heavily polluted from the coal powered steel mills, and the smelting of iron ore. Hundreds of smoke stacks belched-out pitch black pollutants, day and night. That ended, mostly by the 1980s.
@@IMPiChE I don't need an online search I live in quebec. I could drive from montreal to trois-rivieres and see far more snow there any year. same for quebec or pretty much everywhere else
@@IMPiChE I think what they're trying to say is that despite the scale and amount of snow being brought, Montreal gets less snow than a lot of the cities or towns in Québec.
Recalling another "winter snow mountain" memory from the 1990s. I live near a large university in Ohio, in the USA. The campus area snow is cleaner, because it doesn't get exposed to the soot and pollution, of the surrounding city, & car traffic. During large snowfalls, the university closes down,...as it often snows during the months the school is closed down, for the holidays, anyway. Students all travel back to other towns where they grew up and their families live. The snow is shoveled into tall piles, in the vacant student parking lots. In the Spring and warming months,....it melts slowly, creating cold water shallow ponds, only inches deep, across the parking lots. Students wade in the ponds barefoot or in sandals, and can enjoy the sunny days at the same time. People sometimes set up portable, folding chairs to sit in, while their feet are cooled by the shallow pools.
what a NICE and touching memories you have! I can imagine the picture of that , a parking lot with shallow ponds in Spring, and a snow pile nearby, some kids throwing snowball at each other for fun😀, thanks for sharing the nice memories about snow!!
I was working late shift in the university library (student) and came out to the student parking lot to find my car BURIED in snow by the plows. Only car on the lot. Fun and games, I guess. They were still at it. I explained I wasn't parking just to be a nuisance, there were no time limits on the lot, and I'd just come off work. They worked very hard uncovering me, pulling / pushing me out. Said they'd been ordered out. About a month later I noticed signs on the lot "No parking after 10 p.m. during snowfalls" or something like that. OK. As long as I know I'll park somewhere else.
@@veramae4098 I hear you!...Burying our cars under mountains of snow, was a common practice in my hometown, Cleveland, Ohio. Municipal snow plows focus on the streets, means snow gets mounded around parked cars in front of apartments and homes. Depending on weather conditions, that could mean taking hours to days, digging them out. Ugh!
A weird fact,....the within the mountains of snow collected from the city of Cleveland, Ohio, and piled up, in vacant parking lots,.....they often find dead bodies, from humans and animals and weapons, when the snow melts. I read that fairly often in Cleveland news, when I was growing up there.
They must use a different system to get the snow off of the streets because most Canadian cities use some version of a snowblower on a loader which would either get jammed or completely mulch a body.
@@hailong_Vlog He means the text duration is too short. Not enough time to read all of it without pausing. Yes, we have time to 'just' read, but it's a video, don't want to miss the 'actions' too much.
There's a snow dump just down the street from where I live. Water just pools in place when it melts and slowly percolate through the soil during summer.
“Up until the end of the 1980s, snow was simply dumped into the St. Lawrence River, polluting the river system with salt and gravel. Now, a third of the snow goes into Montreal's sewer system, and is treated along with the rest of Montreal's sewage before being released into the river."😀
Problem is the amount of chemicals mixed with the snow (ie anti-freeze, the salt itself, car emissions absorbed by the snow) that makes it heavily polluting for the water. Which is why they dump it in the sewer for it to be treated.
Might not be feasible if the river is frozen over. Would then be just another pile of snow. And let’s not forget that all of that snow comes from city streets that shed their top layers when scraping snow with a plow so all of the concrete and gravel and asphalt bits end up in the pile . Seems to be working fine for them.
Montreal does melt a prodigious amont of snow. At a number of locations, there are openings directly into the sewer main interceptor. There's enough heat in waste water to melt snow. The snow dump are at locations further away from the sewer interceptor, and are also used when there's just too much snow to be able to melt it fast enough.
There are environmental issues with melting. Montreal uses salt and other chemicals to melt ice along the sidewalks and intersections where cars are required to stop. Along with any roads with hills. The snow dump sites do not connect directly with any waterway. When the snow melts in the spring much of the road salt and any debris remain at the dump site without washing out into any waterway.
@@reimayou this comment is complete bogus you have no idea how heavy the snow is it will be different every storm so to come up with your "30 miles" its bs
@@limeylit Not really. The problem with melting snow is that is has a very high air content, making snow a fantastic insulator, which is why these piles last all summer in 30C heat. Do you really think that people who deal with this every winter are sitting around saying "Fuck, we should have just melted it, why didn't we think of that!". And the density is pretty uniform, yes, when it falls some is less or more dense than others, but once you run it through a snow blower and put it into a dump truck all of that difference is gone as it is mechanically compacted in the process. Ask any Canadian how much fun it is to shovel the 'plug' at the end of your driveway after the plow goes by, compared to what fell on your driveway. If you know you know.
Never dump with another end dump side by side. When one turns over, it will hit another truck and cause domino effect. If trucks have the same group insurance, claim will not be paid.
Creating heat actually consumes a lot of energy. So much infact that it would be more expensive to melt the snow instead of disposing it at dumping sites.
I think you are missing the volume of snow that accumulates here in Montreal. In addition to the temperatures staying well below freezing from late November thru mid-late March.
That's a lot of heat to be generated to counteract the cold from the snow. What's happens to snow when it melts? Wheres all that water going to go, freeze right beside the heated plate?
@@RUS-im9gp Ok? Still not as big of an issue as Russian medias portray it. Actually, I've actually never heard of any of the names you stated and I'm Canadian... They talk as if people in the west were brainwashed into changing their sex for no reason, while in reality it's just about letting people do wathever they want with their body as long as it doesn't affect other people. Why do you care so much about what a few hundreds of people do with their body? Even Putin keeps repeating this to scare the population into believing that the "west" is evil, while in reality it's his regime that is evil.
In Oslo airport they dump all the snow underground and use it as natural coolant for the airport's air conditioning system in the summer.
That’s amazing. We need that in Montreal.
@@bengt_axle But transporting Oslo’s snow to Montreal would cost a lot of money!
That's very norwegian.
@@heli-crewhgs5285 I thought Canada was metric? The same system should just work with Canadian snow. 😜
@@-_James_-you would think but we use imperial for most of our construction and trades.
That is one impressive snowblower
yes, very powerful...feel more impressive if you are at dumpsite.
@@hailong_Vlog I can see how high the mountain of snow is it takes horsepower to blow it and that much that high
Well i used to operate z snowblower like this they usually range around 600 hp to 2500 hp and we piled the snow as high as possible around 120 to 200 feet all depends on the engine type , i used to operate a contant with a 1000 hp engine we rented an larue ( similar to the one in the vid ) it had an v12 at 2000 hp
It’ll come in useful during the zombie apocalypse.
@@MrSlapdash243 nop the shear bolt will break after a few bodies ... a skunk took out my blower once wanted to set everything on fire loool
I could watch hours of this big snowblower its so satisfying 😅
Thanks for the video plus the captions that help explain the operation!!
thanks for watching!!😀
I live in Cocoa Beach Florida. It is 78F on January 8th 2023. I have a broom for beach sand.
No hurricanes here, I'll deal with snow !! Just kidding, we all have our challenges with weather !! I've been to Florida, my folks used to winter there, it's absolutely beautiful !!
Dont envy you. Love winter
And a mop for hurricanes.
id rather get lots of snow then get hurricanes lol
Gimme a shovel, a couple of coffee cups and il do it myself 😆.
😆 you have sense of humour ! thanks for watching snow! have a nice day!😀
@@hailong_Vlog Well you need it to get through Canadian winters :). Thanks for putting up nice content!!
@@EyFmS yes,there's snowing now in Montreal, tomorrow lots of Canadians will dig out their car from snow.
Interesting to see how others do this, I work winter times on a snow dump site. A big pile of snow and lorrys drives on it and dumps over edge, we just levels the pile and water on so it carrys better. Now edge is about 25m high and rising
Has anyone thought about compressing blocks of this stuff to stack near a water treatment plant? Even with all the road muck it's the cleanest water out there, and can be spray insulated to keep for a few weeks after the storms end.
@@cherylm2C6671 Our snow pile has filter systems to colekt other stuff when sno melts, bigger things we colekt next autum from ground
Now that's a snow blower! That would clear my road in one pass!
Only five storms per year. Montreal isn’t particularly far north.
I'd love to see how Sapporo, Japan does this, since they receive 3 times as much snow as Montreal. Just to compare.
Fortunately in southern Alberta we get warm Chinook winds that can melt 2' of snow in a single day. But the chinooks don't come when "we want them to", they come when "they" want to. So the chinooks don't help us get rid of snow every time a huge snow dump occurs. But over the course of one winter we can get 4-8 beneficial chinooks when we need 'em. It's almost miraculous to watch it happen.
Now that pile of snow would keep your beer cold on through July.
In this dump site, the snow not melting even in summer:
ruclips.net/video/EzonT1P_PHk/видео.html
@@hailong_Vlog They are basically building a glacier.
@@zachlafond2652 yes, that's biggest snow dump site in Montreal , maybe in Canada.
Thankful for where I live sun 365
wow. 365 days fo sun, that's very nice! I want to live there😀
That throw height is insane.
Throws it up high to recharge the clouds.
César 🌨️🌨️🌨️🌨️🌨️❄️❄️❄️❄️❄️☃️🌬️
Really good thanks :)
thanks for watching!😀
Why don't we transport this snow down along the border west where the runoff could eventually hit the Colorado River and dump into Lake Powell and Mead? Think about what 50 truck loads a day would help out and truck driving jobs?
You missed the best one in Montreal, where the trucks back onto a platform and dump about 100 feet down over a cliff!
I went that huge dumpsite last winter. IN this video:
ruclips.net/video/EzonT1P_PHk/видео.html
A snow pile that big. Does it at least melt by August? Lol
yes, the snow melt by summer, in this huge dumpsite, biggest one in Montreal, some snow never melt!!
ruclips.net/video/EzonT1P_PHk/видео.html
I reckon a few truckloads is about Australia's annual snowfall :O .
Just kidding but snow like that isn't seen down under. They have snow machines to make snow not to get rid of them.
some snow dumps arent completely melted until june here in canada
A IS IT OK FOR SNOW TO JUST GO BACK IN WERE EVER A?
Wow
A WHEN IT MEALTS, WERE IS IT GOING.
"PANAMA RELOCATION TOURS! WITH JACKIE! 🙋😊👍 ❤👈"
Does that water just melt away to no purpose ? Dumb question, I know, but with the drought down here in the states, I'm curious.
yes, the snow just melt away until summer. 🙏
They dump it into at Lawrence or they used to
“Up until the end of the 1980s, snow was simply dumped into the St. Lawrence River, polluting the river system with salt and gravel. Now, a third of the snow goes into Montreal's sewer system, and is treated along with the rest of Montreal's sewage before being released into the river."😀
Needed some sound of that blower engine
ok next time..when I there, I need ear plug..
Useful video!
THNAKS! Have a nice weekend!
how long does it take to melt does it continue into spring?
If you watch all video, you can find answers.😃
@@hailong_Vlog haha ok yeah, I fast forward in a lot of videos, I see at 4:00
1/8/23.....I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, which has Lake Erie on it's northern shore, and Cleveland is usually pummeled by "Lake Effect", winter storms, very often huge snowfalls, but not as bad a Buffalo New York. There they remove snow and push it into Lake Erie, to melt into the water when the temperatures rise. Other places they create monster sized snow mountains in parking lots of defunct shopping plazas. The snow starts out sort of white, but pollution from car exhausts, soon blackens it. The black soot pollution prevents the snow from melting quickly as it act as insulation. However I have seen videos of the melting,....and it takes most of a whole summer, to completely melt.
hi, my friend , thanks for share your information about snow removal in the USA, there is also same problem for snow in winter there. just like you said, yes , the snow pile will cover dust, and melt until summer, have a nice day!😀
The dirt seen on snow piles is not from pollution, it's the dust and dirt and road grime and rocks that the plows pick up that's inside the snow, as the snow melts the dirt and debris stays on the surface and accumulates, until it looks like a dirt pile. And it actually does not insulate the piles unless there is a _large_ amount of dirt, it can actually speed up the melting process when the sun is out because it absorbs the sun's light and converts it to heat which melts the underlying ice. There are studies showing that pollution _is_ causing this issue on glaciers, the light film of soot melts the ice far faster than clean ice, because clean ice and snow reflects light extremely well.
@@TheExplosiveGuy I agree with most of what you say, however, when I was growing up in Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1950s & 60s,. the city air/atmosphere was heavily polluted from the coal powered steel mills, and the smelting of iron ore. Hundreds of smoke stacks belched-out pitch black pollutants, day and night. That ended, mostly by the 1980s.
Very nice video@rupa montreal
thank you! you got your car out already?😀
One cold summer and it’s over
家里小朋友简直迷恋这些车车,好喜欢看你的视频。看得出重型的还是Cat和Deere哈?我们家小朋友超爱Kubota,期待下次看到更多Kubota🤣
你好,很开心你家小朋友喜欢我的视频。他多大了啊?Kubota在这边好像不是很常见的,下次如果看到的,我一定多拍哈。能否问他一个问题,他喜欢看多长时间的视频呢?我的都是比较短,5分多,他觉得视频短不短啊。我今天去拍了,雪天清雪作业!谢谢!
@@hailong_Vlog 谢谢你呀!他不到三岁呢,喜欢工程车,特别喜欢看除雪❄️!对他来说视频自然是越长越好,恨不能看到天荒地老🤣……对我们来说给他看五到十分钟就非常好👍!我们也看了la grande roue,glissades。都很喜欢哟!谢谢🙏
@@clairew5067 小朋友还不到三岁呢!肯定是我的最小的观众了。这么小就能看出来各种车的型号品牌,很聪明哦。这么小的小朋友看5分钟就可以了。也谢谢你们的支持和鼓励哈!😀
This is only one city at that and one where it doesn't snow as much as elsewhere in the province
That’s definitely not true. Just one little search online shows you’re wrong.
@@IMPiChE I don't need an online search I live in quebec. I could drive from montreal to trois-rivieres and see far more snow there any year. same for quebec or pretty much everywhere else
@@IMPiChE I think what they're trying to say is that despite the scale and amount of snow being brought, Montreal gets less snow than a lot of the cities or towns in Québec.
Recalling another "winter snow mountain" memory from the 1990s. I live near a large university in Ohio, in the USA. The campus area snow is cleaner, because it doesn't get exposed to the soot and pollution, of the surrounding city, & car traffic. During large snowfalls, the university closes down,...as it often snows during the months the school is closed down, for the holidays, anyway. Students all travel back to other towns where they grew up and their families live. The snow is shoveled into tall piles, in the vacant student parking lots. In the Spring and warming months,....it melts slowly, creating cold water shallow ponds, only inches deep, across the parking lots. Students wade in the ponds barefoot or in sandals, and can enjoy the sunny days at the same time. People sometimes set up portable, folding chairs to sit in, while their feet are cooled by the shallow pools.
what a NICE and touching memories you have! I can imagine the picture of that , a parking lot with shallow ponds in Spring, and a snow pile nearby, some kids throwing snowball at each other for fun😀, thanks for sharing the nice memories about snow!!
@@hailong_Vlog You are welcome!
I was working late shift in the university library (student) and came out to the student parking lot to find my car BURIED in snow by the plows. Only car on the lot. Fun and games, I guess. They were still at it.
I explained I wasn't parking just to be a nuisance, there were no time limits on the lot, and I'd just come off work. They worked very hard uncovering me, pulling / pushing me out. Said they'd been ordered out.
About a month later I noticed signs on the lot "No parking after 10 p.m. during snowfalls" or something like that. OK. As long as I know I'll park somewhere else.
@@veramae4098 I hear you!...Burying our cars under mountains of snow, was a common practice in my hometown, Cleveland, Ohio. Municipal snow plows focus on the streets, means snow gets mounded around parked cars in front of apartments and homes. Depending on weather conditions, that could mean taking hours to days, digging them out. Ugh!
wow
今天咱们的视频几乎同时发的哈,撞视频了,主题还都是一样的。😀
是,撞频了
@@hihaichannel 😀
cool
thanks!my friend!
If your going to put text on screen dont leave it for a millisecond give the viewer time to read it...
thanks for your advice ! I will not do better next time.
A weird fact,....the within the mountains of snow collected from the city of Cleveland, Ohio, and piled up, in vacant parking lots,.....they often find dead bodies, from humans and animals and weapons, when the snow melts. I read that fairly often in Cleveland news, when I was growing up there.
haha ,very interesting , human body and weapon under the snow pile....😃
@@hailong_Vlog More like disturbing,....
They must use a different system to get the snow off of the streets because most Canadian cities use some version of a snowblower on a loader which would either get jammed or completely mulch a body.
I saw a 350 honda loaded into a ten wheeler hauled off during snow removal in appt complex in Denver in the 90 s see ya
Is this video only for speed readers?
what's "speed reader" mean here?
@@hailong_Vlog
He means the text duration is too short. Not enough time to read all of it without pausing.
Yes, we have time to 'just' read, but it's a video, don't want to miss the 'actions' too much.
@@hodor I see, thanks! I will do better next time . I will try to mix text and action well.😃😀
I bet all the road sait in that snow is doing wonders in the St. Lawrence River system
There are multiple studies. Go search instead of speculating.
They send that snow through a water threatment plant before it goes into the river...
There's a snow dump just down the street from where I live. Water just pools in place when it melts and slowly percolate through the soil during summer.
所以半年才會溶完?那不就沒隔幾個月又要開始鏟雪了@@?
是的,7月份融化完了,12月份又开始清雪作业了。有个月的雪堆上有个推土机,应该是帮助积雪融化的。
I'm surprised they can't set up a system to just dump snow directly in the river. Would save all that stacking business.
“Up until the end of the 1980s, snow was simply dumped into the St. Lawrence River, polluting the river system with salt and gravel. Now, a third of the snow goes into Montreal's sewer system, and is treated along with the rest of Montreal's sewage before being released into the river."😀
Problem is the amount of chemicals mixed with the snow (ie anti-freeze, the salt itself, car emissions absorbed by the snow) that makes it heavily polluting for the water. Which is why they dump it in the sewer for it to be treated.
@@firegun7 yes, that's right. Thanks for watching ! have a nice day!😃
Yes, makes sense. But it ends up in the river anyway from the piles that just get stacked up, less the gravel I suppose.
Might not be feasible if the river is frozen over. Would then be just another pile of snow. And let’s not forget that all of that snow comes from city streets that shed their top layers when scraping snow with a plow so all of the concrete and gravel and asphalt bits end up in the pile . Seems to be working fine for them.
Maybe donate all that snow to empty lakes down south to help with drought...
Ayyy
And this I why we can't swim anywhere around the island.
Should dump the snow somewhere in the shadow, then it wouldn't melt the whole year :)
😀 thanks for watching!
Dont let this video fool you. Everything is incredibly unnificent. When you mix canadian weather and goverment youre always in for a treat
I could watch this for hours. Hint-hint
I'm picturing you freezing your ass off for this footage. Thank you, and I apologize to your toes.
It's hard to clear the snow😅
but we are professional for snow removal, Canadien invented first snow blower😀
Bring some to texas
The display time on you subtitles is way too short for someone to read.
OK thanks for advice. Next time I will improve the subtitles work.😃
相反於"It's never rains in california"加拿大從不缺水囉?
我们蒙特利尔水费非常非常便宜。😀
were does all the water go when this melts
water will go to sewer slowly..😀
Wouldn’t melting it cost less fuel than trucking it any distance?
Montreal does melt a prodigious amont of snow. At a number of locations, there are openings directly into the sewer main interceptor. There's enough heat in waste water to melt snow. The snow dump are at locations further away from the sewer interceptor, and are also used when there's just too much snow to be able to melt it fast enough.
Melting snow costs a lot of energy. With that energy you can transport it over 50km/ 30 miles
There are environmental issues with melting. Montreal uses salt and other chemicals to melt ice along the sidewalks and intersections where cars are required to stop. Along with any roads with hills. The snow dump sites do not connect directly with any waterway. When the snow melts in the spring much of the road salt and any debris remain at the dump site without washing out into any waterway.
@@reimayou this comment is complete bogus you have no idea how heavy the snow is it will be different every storm so to come up with your "30 miles" its bs
@@limeylit Not really. The problem with melting snow is that is has a very high air content, making snow a fantastic insulator, which is why these piles last all summer in 30C heat. Do you really think that people who deal with this every winter are sitting around saying "Fuck, we should have just melted it, why didn't we think of that!". And the density is pretty uniform, yes, when it falls some is less or more dense than others, but once you run it through a snow blower and put it into a dump truck all of that difference is gone as it is mechanically compacted in the process. Ask any Canadian how much fun it is to shovel the 'plug' at the end of your driveway after the plow goes by, compared to what fell on your driveway. If you know you know.
你好美好的一天! - 传递感谢和报应,也为了纪念您美丽的频道。- 向玛丽致敬! - 外面有多冷?我在这里发抖。 - 我在巴西东北部地区,现在气温在零上 25°,天气很冷。 - 我不知道你怎么能忍受,我知道他们在周围使用热量,但我想即使如此,街道还是很冷。 - 我已经离开了我的喜欢,你的频道简直太棒了。 - 给全家一个大大的拥抱和圣诞快乐。
I'm from Montreal and half the things you said its wrong
ok, what wrong please let me know, all the information is from internet...I did not make it up. thanks for watching !!😃
Hi
thanks for visiting!😀
Gonna be fun to see them do this with all electric vehicles 🤣🤣🤣
#1 Why would you not want to be a trailer length at least from outher truck.
You afraid of the dark.
Shit happens you know.
thanks for watching!
😳😳😳😳
thanks for watching!😀
A SNOW IS SNOW A WERE IS IT GOING A
Diesel engines
underground cities is only solution to this ...
What’s with all the Chinese writing for the Chinese on Canada or did they infiltrated.
IT HAS TO GO AWAY A A
Omg its so dumb, just dump it in a park nearby, kids will have fun, everyone wins
kids can go snow tubing on it 😀
@@hailong_Vlog True. Council am I right?
@@philipdrew7518 😃 thanks for watching!
Never dump with another end dump side by side. When one turns over, it will hit another truck and cause domino effect. If trucks have the same group insurance, claim will not be paid.
Why don't they just burn it!
😀
Cause it's highly flammable, it could spread and turn Canada into hell on earth.
@@EyFmS 😆
It would be easier to simply melt on spot in street
hi, too much snow here, its about 200cm snowfall every year.thanks for watching!
$$$
snow removal is like business here , in Montreal, cost of lots of money😀
Global warming...
thanks for watching !
You know they could just make a heated plate to dump the snow on instead of spending so much money and all the equipment and fuel
You should apply at the city council. Aren’t you a genius heh?
Creating heat actually consumes a lot of energy. So much infact that it would be more expensive to melt the snow instead of disposing it at dumping sites.
🤦♂️
I think you are missing the volume of snow that accumulates here in Montreal. In addition to the temperatures staying well below freezing from late November thru mid-late March.
That's a lot of heat to be generated to counteract the cold from the snow. What's happens to snow when it melts? Wheres all that water going to go, freeze right beside the heated plate?
Put it refrigerators/reefers and take it to lake Mead.
Good idea! 😁
At least where I live in Norway, they're not allowed to dump it in the ocean anymore because of rubber particles and pollution
This is what you can learn from them. Not their gender schizophrenia.
I think you're reading a bit too much Russian propaganda 😂
@@PG-3462, Yeah. Tucker Carlson, Ben Shapiro, Jordan Peterson and others. Yours.
@@RUS-im9gp all propaganda and miss information. Try better sources.
@@ericdesmeules8117, And what do other sources report?
@@RUS-im9gp Ok? Still not as big of an issue as Russian medias portray it. Actually, I've actually never heard of any of the names you stated and I'm Canadian... They talk as if people in the west were brainwashed into changing their sex for no reason, while in reality it's just about letting people do wathever they want with their body as long as it doesn't affect other people. Why do you care so much about what a few hundreds of people do with their body?
Even Putin keeps repeating this to scare the population into believing that the "west" is evil, while in reality it's his regime that is evil.