You would be surprised by how often this happens, totally different skillset than cutting grade or digging trenches, number 1 rule is when you start to sink STOP, assess the situation, don't be afraid to seek help before your buried.
Man I was pulling on the arm’s of my recliner and rocking back and forth the whole time, I was even breathing hard bye the time he got out of that bog.
I'm an ex combat engineer, used to end op in all sorts of sticky situations. What i would have done, was removed as much dirt/mud behinde the bull's tracks as possible, the hook the bull to the diggers undercarriage, start to drive. And then use your arm in the digger to pull you and the bull out 😎✌️ But nice job, and thanks for the action here on YT 👍
I've always been curious why a dumbazz would drive off in soup like that. Not to mention the dumbazz on the dozier constantly spins the tracks that keeps it bottomed out.
Thanks for sharing and putting up with all the arm chair operator quarterbacks. It seems obvious to me that the reason the dozer kept his tracks going was to try and break suction and assist the excavator. The excavator would not pull the dozer skidding.
I was actually the guy in the dozer, and that is exactly why I was doing that. BUT.....I'm not the one that got it stuck, I was just a welder on that job and the guy in the hoe got it stuck. That was a mud desposal site for all of our bore sections that was just being pushed into a pile. To dry out. Lol some of these dude's on here are ruthless 🤣
@@fergusonlandmanagementweld3696 Not to mention, it only took 10 minutes to get it out. It wasn’t like the hoe hand spent an hour before he dug out behind you. Armchair pipeliners.
@@bradkalfee7256 Didnt say they were. In fact, the dozer hand flat ass said he was a welder, and the “hoe hand” was the guy who got the dozer buried. I said it didn’t even take ten minutes to get themselves out. I’ve been around this shit over thirty years. Nobody or any equipment got hurt. They took five more minutes than you would have. Lighten up.
@@fergusonlandmanagementweld3696 makes sense now, I was sat here thinking ‘why does he keep putting the blade down when all he’s doing is lifting the cab up and down really’ now you’ve said you’re not an operator it’s clear. 👍🏻, I’m hoping you’ll say the idiot trying to snap the slew ring and twist the dipper on the 210 isn’t an operator either. 😂😂😂
I have watched this several times how does he expect to get that thing out you have to dig out behind it and the guy spinning the track on the dozer wow
They ought to have worked in unison instead of against each other. The man on the excavator was trying to pull while he was lifting the blade to get dry dirt under the tracks. Also, they should have got some of the chains off of the trailer and hooked it to the tracks on the dozer. Use the excavator as a anchor point.
Anytime you get a machine stuck like that, you HAVE to get the suction lose. Dig the mud away from the sides first. I hope no one is paying you guys to run these machines! Not to mention if that strap breaks the way you are pulling its gonna smack the glass.
Back in 1986 while I was assigned to an Engineer Battalion at Fort., we sunk a D7 Dozier into Belton Lake. It took two M88 tank recovery vehicles and two HEMMIT wreckers to pull it out. We two officers in the Battalion that were recreational divers. They got drafted to dive in the lake to hook up the two cables. While they were under water a moccasin swam over were they where. Everybody saw it. Our 1st Sergeant yelled at everybody stating "Don't tell them about the snake. We'll never get them back in the wayer!!!" Now body side a word. Eventually we got the dozer towed out. In went to 3rd shop Maintenance Battalion to get repaired. Our company didn't get it back for a year.
It looked like it was straddling hard dirt too. The hoe operator should've done more digging behind, and the dozer guy should've kept his blade up as far as possible instead of dragging it like he was at first.
The operator is not using the trackhoe to its best advantage. You need to use the machine to dig a little more and then use the hydraulic to pull on the dozer.
to start with, you need some CCR for back ground music, also before getting that far stuck, we used to use a chainsaw and actually spend a few hours setting up, amazing how much flotation you can build to get through or back up, any way was fun to watch, I one time was a train engineer and with our engine had to pull a few trucks out of the ditch on our work trains, we also would carry D5 and a tracked hoe with us as well, amazing the places they would go
Ok I was thinking the same thing, but I was doubting myself. Exactly why not try to dig it out a little so your not fighting the suction of the mud in addition to the fact that the excavator is too small to pull it out
Final comment, looking at the heading I would flip it and say operating fool! But only for the dozer, resque with small machine out gunned three to one, bloody well done that man!!!
These guys look so intelligent. Just wait till the rental company sees this! Pour sawdust or wood shavings on that mud. It tends to dry things and then it’ll come right out.
I love big machinery rescuing other machines. I'm a forklift operator, but just recently completed my training on the excavator, and on my third day I had to "rescue" a dumper which was stuck in the snow, just push it with the bucket - easy. Point is that it's awesome that you can use the immense power of one machine to rescue the other. You usually don't use the bumpers of your car to push another car out of a spot, but with these machines, covered with thick steel everywhere, you can use buckets, tracks, hydraulics, blades - whatever you have handy to rescue someone else - it's awesome! :)
"Oliver could see that Byron was stuck deep in the mud. Strong cables were attached between the two machines. Oliver pulled and struggled, but every time he backed up, he kept on tilting."
Once saw a 1066Korehring with mud up to the top of the tracks and he was still walking. He knew not to stop or try to turn. It took a while but he and it got out. My job was to clean it off.
The most impressive thing about that whole video was the strap they were using. I believed it would have snapped a chain. Secondly, I'm surprised the camera man didn't get stuck or hurt.
It was made of carbon fiber the strongest fiber known to man. The camera man has years of training in Polaroid usage. He's experienced to say the least a pro.
When I did this with my dozer I learned a few things. The crusty cracked mud looks temptingly safe to cross but the more you jiggle it, the more liquid it becomes. Once the dozer's tracks lose traction they "dig out' the dirt/mud beneath them and the dozer drops until it sits on its belly pan (where it has enough area to support the dozer on the mud) and its tracks "dig" until all their slack is sagging below and there is no way to put weight on them to get "TRACKtion." To unstick the dozer you have to slide it on its belly pan using some external traction like the excavator. The dozer is still "in a hole" meaning it is below the "safe" dirt around it. Not only do you have to slide it against the resistance of its "mud stuck" belly pan, you have to lift its weight to the height of the surrounding "safe" soil (by dirt or other ramp, jacks and blocks, or a crane or excavator). Imagine how much traction the dozer needs just to drive up an otherwise drivable hill! You now need more than that to unstick it. Digging the mud from beside the tracks may reduce suction but does nothing to supply or increase traction, actually making it worse when in mud. Turning the dozer's tracks in mud only makes it all worse, as many here have noticed. Obviously they worked this out, but not very elegantly. As a dozer driver, once you spin a track, you must immediately stop trying to drive until you get some external traction. In this case (as well as my own) it is too muddy to put logs or rocks under the sagged tracks. I had nothing but bog around me so couldn't use my excavator, and there was nothing close enough to tie to and pull off of. I waited all winter until the ground dried enough to jack up my dozer using the 6 way blade. I had no rippers but I was able to lift the dozer high enough, in steps by rocking it on wood blocks under the tracks near its center of gravity. At some point I could also put blocks under the winch. The blocks readily sank in the, now drying muck, but I made a wide enough footprint with them, which gave me enough time to add blocks faster than they could disappear. I jacked and blocked, see-sawing, until the bottom of the sagging tracks was at surrounding ground level, filled under them with dry dirt and rock, and also moved the surrounding soil so I didn't have to climb over even a slight bump of dirt. At that point I quickly drove to solid ground before the blocks and dozer had time to sink again. Needless to say, after cleaning and scraping mud, I now avoid any semblance of boggy soil. Fun problem - better if its someone else's tractor.
How many watching this thought about what would happen if that 1 inch cable snapped? I had a foreman shut down an excavator once when he broke his windshield out due to safety. It was replaced a few hours later, and the operator went back to work. Shortly after, a hydraulic line broke directly in front of the operator, shooting with such force that it broke the new windshield again. Had that glass not been there, that operator would have been hit by 350 degree hydraulic oil. It lost 50 gallons in just a few seconds!
I've seen this 200 times and the same idea is tried every time with the same outcome. next time you have a dummy driving your machine have an air compressor standing by with 40 feet of threaded pipe to pump air underneath to break the vacuum because that's what the big issue is... vacuum
the way he keeps spinning his tracks shows his lack of experience no wonder he was stuck. spinning tracks when nobody was pulling was a waste of effort
Yep. It looks like the dozer "operator" had his blade down most of the time which made it nearly impossible to be pulled out... until he figured out he should lift it. I would NEVER let my face be shown on a video like this if I was on the dozer.... lol (Hose A and Hose B)
gonna have to dig him a ramp coming back up out of there,,LOL
I wouldn't let these guys borrow a shovel.
These people are fucking morons.. finito they all need fired!!!
If they would dig behind the dozer first then pull.
Can I borrow a shovel?
@@TexasPipeliner777 Just this once.
A-Men.
"suit up son, you're gonna make friends with the pressure washer.. alllll night lonnnnnng."
HAHA!! LOVE IT!!
I'm an operator myself and from experience hook to the undercarriage of your excavator and bury that bucket and pull like hell
That's actually a really great idea! Never thought of that! Will try that next time a truck gets stuck on our site!
@@zachfreeman1503 always works best for me on something heavy
So you’re saying hook to the undercarriage, turn your machine around and use the bucket to pull yourself and use the drive motors at the same time?
@@markjackson160 yes for maximum pulling power
@@kennethlitten2251 😂ใคร❤ใน
Somebody tell the dozer operator, once you're sitting on the belly pan, spinning the tracks just makes things worse! He should have known.
I was thinking same thing,not going anywhere
No need in just spinning the tracks that fast, just keeps loosing any head way he made.
Dumb and Dumber
Bulldozer driver is an idiot... Doesn't know what he is doing...
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
You would be surprised by how often this happens, totally different skillset than cutting grade or digging trenches, number 1 rule is when you start to sink STOP, assess the situation, don't be afraid to seek help before your buried.
No kidding, that sucker starts under, leave it and see what the hell you've gotten yourself into.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
Man I was pulling on the arm’s of my recliner and rocking back and forth the whole time, I was even breathing hard bye the time he got out of that bog.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
Not everyone should be allowed around heavy equipment.
I would of done that from the start, open the back up for the dozer..
Take the strap off, dig the under carriage free and your done dude. This shit blows my mind
This is funny, the dozer operator keeps digging in. LOL
On the other hand it never moved until he broke the suction by pushing the blade down and then lifting again.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
I'm an ex combat engineer, used to end op in all sorts of sticky situations.
What i would have done, was removed as much dirt/mud behinde the bull's tracks as possible, the hook the bull to the diggers undercarriage, start to drive. And then use your arm in the digger to pull you and the bull out 😎✌️
But nice job, and thanks for the action here on YT 👍
I've always been curious why a dumbazz would drive off in soup like that. Not to mention the dumbazz on the dozier constantly spins the tracks that keeps it bottomed out.
If you cant make the dozer go up on the dirt you gotta make the dirt go down. lol
Would not have taken a genius to know that dozer wasn't going through that.
U099ub .
Ò0
A CAT would have made it through
@@TexasPipeliner777 d6 maybe d8 hell no
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
Yeah he's got butter finger tracks not big cleats for mud, I wouldn't have even tried it with those tracks
It's held by suction..the only way out is to dig it out..unless you want to be there forever pulling and straining on it
Gareth Ifan I was thinking the same. Digging the mud out from around the dozer would make things easier
Indeed it would Chris..seen as they already have a perfect digging tool right there..no brainer really..
Gareth Ifan g
I agree the tractor is held by suction the only to get it out is to dig it out and if possible get another tractor with a winch to help pull it out
It just shows some operators don’t use there head in a pinch
Thanks for sharing and putting up with all the arm chair operator quarterbacks. It seems obvious to me that the reason the dozer kept his tracks going was to try and break suction and assist the excavator. The excavator would not pull the dozer skidding.
I was actually the guy in the dozer, and that is exactly why I was doing that. BUT.....I'm not the one that got it stuck, I was just a welder on that job and the guy in the hoe got it stuck. That was a mud desposal site for all of our bore sections that was just being pushed into a pile. To dry out. Lol some of these dude's on here are ruthless 🤣
@@fergusonlandmanagementweld3696 Not to mention, it only took 10 minutes to get it out. It wasn’t like the hoe hand spent an hour before he dug out behind you. Armchair pipeliners.
@@jaredbaratono897 you dont run equipment. If you did, you would know these 2 are not operators. Not even close
@@bradkalfee7256 Didnt say they were. In fact, the dozer hand flat ass said he was a welder, and the “hoe hand” was the guy who got the dozer buried. I said it didn’t even take ten minutes to get themselves out. I’ve been around this shit over thirty years. Nobody or any equipment got hurt. They took five more minutes than you would have. Lighten up.
@@fergusonlandmanagementweld3696 makes sense now, I was sat here thinking ‘why does he keep putting the blade down when all he’s doing is lifting the cab up and down really’ now you’ve said you’re not an operator it’s clear. 👍🏻, I’m hoping you’ll say the idiot trying to snap the slew ring and twist the dipper on the 210 isn’t an operator either. 😂😂😂
LMAO!.THIS IS COMICAL!.
야이새끼들아대가리가돌이구나
I have watched this several times how does he expect to get that thing out you have to dig out behind it and the guy spinning the track on the dozer wow
Both operations done operative work effectively. well done
Hiiiii
Never pull the cable so close to the cab because it can break.
They ought to have worked in unison instead of against each other. The man on the excavator was trying to pull while he was lifting the blade to get dry dirt under the tracks. Also, they should have got some of the chains off of the trailer and hooked it to the tracks on the dozer. Use the excavator as a anchor point.
Donnie Creech dude if you can see nobody wanted to get dirty all these clean white shirts.
Sex.
@@chalisant1987 mimi
Anytime you get a machine stuck like that, you HAVE to get the suction lose. Dig the mud away from the sides first. I hope no one is paying you guys to run these machines! Not to mention if that strap breaks the way you are pulling its gonna smack the glass.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
si
,
Funny i catch myself tensing up watchin this
I had to get a backhoe to pull my ass from my chair. Man my fanny puckered clean through my jeans.
Took him long enough to dig out the rear of the dozer so he could pull it
Lol!
Dig around the dozer, and if it still needs a yank, hook the strop to the undercarriage of the digger..not the darn bucket.
If my day was like that I'd go get drunk.
We were
Back in 1986 while I was assigned to an Engineer Battalion at Fort., we sunk a D7 Dozier into Belton Lake. It took two M88 tank recovery vehicles and two HEMMIT wreckers to pull it out. We two officers in the Battalion that were recreational divers. They got drafted to dive in the lake to hook up the two cables. While they were under water a moccasin swam over were they where. Everybody saw it. Our 1st Sergeant yelled at everybody stating "Don't tell them about the snake. We'll never get them back in the wayer!!!" Now body side a word. Eventually we got the dozer towed out. In went to 3rd shop Maintenance Battalion to get repaired. Our company didn't get it back for a year.
I watch these videos and wonder how do these machines end up stuck in these obvious mud pits ?
hahaha,, because they get 7 million plus views pulling it out and views on TH-cam is where the money is..
If you backed the excavator up about 3 miles and pulled him with the dipper you would get a lot more action then the boom at max lift. No power there
The Blair Witch Project version of a stuck dozer. Fun to watch.
Dig out beside the dozer to break the suction.....that's what's holding it.
It looked like it was straddling hard dirt too. The hoe operator should've done more digging behind, and the dozer guy should've kept his blade up as far as possible instead of dragging it like he was at first.
Very few people out there know the suction plays a mighty role. It's like a giant vacuum is hanging on beneath the dozer.
The operator is not using the trackhoe to its best advantage. You need to use the machine to dig a little more and then use the hydraulic to pull on the dozer.
Dud, you might try digging from behind him before you pull !!
Somebody tell these dudes the bucket curl has the most "pull".
They don't know what they are doing can't you tell
@@bobwalton5657 Yes, thus, my comment. You should have known.
q😢😢😢😢⁰yuuyyy6
Is this a new movie? Dumb and Dumber: Operation Shock & Awe
NEVER SEND A KOMOTSU TO DO A CATERPILLAR'S JOB
d65 is a great machine just has a terrible op in it
Your fired!
If you don't get the dirt from behind you ain't gonna get it out
to start with, you need some CCR for back ground music, also before getting that far stuck, we used to use a chainsaw and actually spend a few hours setting up, amazing how much flotation you can build to get through or back up, any way was fun to watch,
I one time was a train engineer and with our engine had to pull a few trucks out of the ditch on our work trains, we also would carry D5 and a tracked hoe with us as well, amazing the places they would go
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
If you ran my new dozer up to the cab you be looking for another one to run tomorrow
owners kid
@@notinservice3724 well then he'd get his ass kicked
There now don't go back in there🤣🤣🤣
If only they had a machine that could dig some of the due away from behind the dozer.
That would be handy in this situation, I wonder where they could get one...
Ok I was thinking the same thing, but I was doubting myself. Exactly why not try to dig it out a little so your not fighting the suction of the mud in addition to the fact that the excavator is too small to pull it out
OMG I was thinking the same thing. It's like one of those videos of a guy using a reciprocating saw with out it being plugged in.
The power is in the boom curl btw, probably could have pulled it right out with it.
Boom doesn't curl boom raises and lowers. Bucket curls
@@brandondean4614 I meant to say stick.
I believe if I was doing that, I'd dig all the dirt from behind the dozer. It should come out then. He must have read my mind.
Bla, bla, they got it out. Everyone on you tube is always smarter than every one,
Pretty sure that wasn't a chain
@@williammosley5286 бог он 8х
Now make whoever got it stuck clean it.
Final comment, looking at the heading I would flip it and say operating fool! But only for the dozer, resque with small machine out gunned three to one, bloody well done that man!!!
Dig dude dig!!we had one stuck and it tip so fuel was leaking out.. well needless to say the damn inspector made a big deal out of it
no shit . they call it back hoe stuck because you need to dig . this concept in this particular situation would be obvious to a 6 year old
Hiiiiii
Hiii
Number sendme
Whatasick feeling,you know it’s gonna come out but when
very good machine operator and intelligent
Its gonna take a good good long time to get all that off there
These guys look so intelligent. Just wait till the rental company sees this! Pour sawdust or wood shavings on that mud. It tends to dry things and then it’ll come right out.
Estica a lança para puxar,é faça uma.barreira de terra na roda guia,para ficar mais alta que a roda motris
Curling the bucket really helps
That's why you don't drive a dozer into a mud pond.
I love big machinery rescuing other machines. I'm a forklift operator, but just recently completed my training on the excavator, and on my third day I had to "rescue" a dumper which was stuck in the snow, just push it with the bucket - easy. Point is that it's awesome that you can use the immense power of one machine to rescue the other. You usually don't use the bumpers of your car to push another car out of a spot, but with these machines, covered with thick steel everywhere, you can use buckets, tracks, hydraulics, blades - whatever you have handy to rescue someone else - it's awesome! :)
Техника по уши в глине, но на твёрдую почву выбрались) Молодцы.
"Oliver could see that Byron was stuck deep in the mud. Strong cables were attached between the two machines. Oliver pulled and struggled, but every time he backed up, he kept on tilting."
Like getting stuck here wasn't totally predictable. I'd send that operator back to school.
Let's see...if I'm high centered now...maybe spinning the tracks will help..."
Sometimes it works
The REAL hero is the rope. Must have been strong as hell!!!
Balasan
Have to break to the suction first!
Dozer guys a certain type of special
Once saw a 1066Korehring with mud up to the top of the tracks and he was still walking. He knew not to stop or try to turn. It took a while but he and it got out. My job was to clean it off.
The most impressive thing about that whole video was the strap they were using. I believed it would have snapped a chain. Secondly, I'm surprised the camera man didn't get stuck or hurt.
It was made of carbon fiber the strongest fiber known to man. The camera man has years of training in Polaroid usage. He's experienced to say the least a pro.
Funny how no matter what is going on the safety patrol always shows up.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
have got to be 2 of the worst drivers i have ever seen,, shameful
Com cordo com vc, na parte que teria que tira o exerço de lama👍
Helen Keller in that dozer
Kudos to that sling. Gotta be very well made to do that.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
When I did this with my dozer I learned a few things. The crusty cracked mud looks temptingly safe to cross but the more you jiggle it, the more liquid it becomes. Once the dozer's tracks lose traction they "dig out' the dirt/mud beneath them and the dozer drops until it sits on its belly pan (where it has enough area to support the dozer on the mud) and its tracks "dig" until all their slack is sagging below and there is no way to put weight on them to get "TRACKtion." To unstick the dozer you have to slide it on its belly pan using some external traction like the excavator. The dozer is still "in a hole" meaning it is below the "safe" dirt around it. Not only do you have to slide it against the resistance of its "mud stuck" belly pan, you have to lift its weight to the height of the surrounding "safe" soil (by dirt or other ramp, jacks and blocks, or a crane or excavator). Imagine how much traction the dozer needs just to drive up an otherwise drivable hill! You now need more than that to unstick it. Digging the mud from beside the tracks may reduce suction but does nothing to supply or increase traction, actually making it worse when in mud. Turning the dozer's tracks in mud only makes it all worse, as many here have noticed. Obviously they worked this out, but not very elegantly. As a dozer driver, once you spin a track, you must immediately stop trying to drive until you get some external traction. In this case (as well as my own) it is too muddy to put logs or rocks under the sagged tracks. I had nothing but bog around me so couldn't use my excavator, and there was nothing close enough to tie to and pull off of. I waited all winter until the ground dried enough to jack up my dozer using the 6 way blade. I had no rippers but I was able to lift the dozer high enough, in steps by rocking it on wood blocks under the tracks near its center of gravity. At some point I could also put blocks under the winch. The blocks readily sank in the, now drying muck, but I made a wide enough footprint with them, which gave me enough time to add blocks faster than they could disappear. I jacked and blocked, see-sawing, until the bottom of the sagging tracks was at surrounding ground level, filled under them with dry dirt and rock, and also moved the surrounding soil so I didn't have to climb over even a slight bump of dirt. At that point I quickly drove to solid ground before the blocks and dozer had time to sink again. Needless to say, after cleaning and scraping mud, I now avoid any semblance of boggy soil. Fun problem - better if its someone else's tractor.
No experience either one
Uswamp sinking away dozer unable to get out
dig out the krap behind the dozer and ramp it up. jesus christ.
You have to dig a trench to pull it out of there
That is called lack of experience
Can't be scared all your life
Simpley dig the dozer out with the excavator first. Then hook up the choker cable and pull him out . No big deal!
call talent agency!! we need a new crew of clowns Tell them to bring shovels
Brilliant video thank you
Das gefällt, der Weg ist das Ziel.
Auch guter Baggerfahrer.
Guess who’s cleaning the tracks?
I suggest Mr Bean... What do you think? 😂😂😂
How many watching this thought about what would happen if that 1 inch cable snapped? I had a foreman shut down an excavator once when he broke his windshield out due to safety. It was replaced a few hours later, and the operator went back to work. Shortly after, a hydraulic line broke directly in front of the operator, shooting with such force that it broke the new windshield again. Had that glass not been there, that operator would have been hit by 350 degree hydraulic oil. It lost 50 gallons in just a few seconds!
I've seen this 200 times and the same idea is tried every time with the same outcome. next time you have a dummy driving your machine have an air compressor standing by with 40 feet of threaded pipe to pump air underneath to break the vacuum because that's what the big issue is... vacuum
You looking for a job? Maybe you can be the man?
@@TexasPipeliner777 i am the man. smart enough to know mud a dozer are not buddys no matter how hard you try.
@@TexasPipeliner777 ha ha. i like that
Reading title i was thinking of that old Counter strike video "Door stuck"
If they worked for me they would be unemployed on the spot!
It was bad decisions like this that lead to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
That was 9 minutes Plus of frustration.
I haven't seen a hole that wet since, well I won't go there.
I've never run one of these machines and I'm already more qualified than these clowns.
Make him clean the mud off BEFORE you tell him he's fired.
It sure would be nice if they had something like a backhoe or track hoe to dig it out.
You read my mind for the first half of the video.
th-cam.com/video/14NcaoKPDF4/w-d-xo.html
Brandon its not the suction, it's the fact he has chopped all the ground away under his tracks! No ground to sit on adds up to no drive!
the way he keeps spinning his tracks shows his lack of experience no wonder he was stuck. spinning tracks when nobody was pulling was a waste of effort
another off site expert heard from
Pretty much. Waste of effort, does it matter? The tracks were spinning in water it was high centered, could probably spin those tracks at idle.
Bom
Van zee SW zee zee...ce Nickerson to
Yep. It looks like the dozer "operator" had his blade down most of the time which made it nearly impossible to be pulled out... until he figured out he should lift it. I would NEVER let my face be shown on a video like this if I was on the dozer.... lol (Hose A and Hose B)
How did that dozer guy think he was going to do anything with that mud. He was spinning way to much when the excavator wasn’t even pulling.
เะๅะ
REALLY please tell me these 2 guys are now FIRED WTF
Worst excavator driver of all time ( ever)
There is no such thing as an excavator driver. We are called excavator operators
First time I got stuck, the boss handed me a chainsaw and said everyone else is busy, get it out you got it in.
that is a great life lesson, as you got to know the limits
russell eato
Dig out behind dozer, then lower boom to ground level and use the stick to pull back with the dozer
I've seen an excavator pick up a stone truck like a toy. Very powerful.
👙👙👙👙👙
Step 1 do not buy Japanese. Step 2 train your operators.
hmmm where do they hire these people.....
Dozer dozed off.
That dozer is going to need a fire truck to wash out all that mud.