APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Comments and questions about the APOD on the main view screen.
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neufer
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Re: 'these guys' : extra puyk!

Post by neufer » Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:24 pm

owlice wrote:
Extra puyk! I agree. And what a delightful expression. Why don't we use that all over the world these days?
I don't know how "puyk" would be pronounced the world over, but in English, the pronunciation would likely be akin to puke, and "puke" is something I suspect most people wouldn't want extra of! :shock:
Puyck in Amsterdam
http://tupalo.com/en/amsterdam/puyk wrote:
Share Puyk with your friends
Image
[Puyk] is my favourite restaurant in Amsterdam - and we've been to a lot. The food is excellent - up-market French-asian, with some interesting options, including green thai curry sorbet - the only thing I didn't like so much, but it's a personal taste issue, they do an amazing pecan pie. The staff are wonderful - they remembered us the second time we went, and it had been a few months in between. The owner, Ms Puyk, runs it, and is often there. She comes up with a lot of the menu from her travels and she's very friendly. Happily gave us the recipe for the most amazing sea food bisque. It's not cheap, but absolutely worth the price and wonderful for a special occasion. They have a Deli around the corner which has cheese and wines and wonderful unfiltered olive oils, and small versions of the menu which you can make at home, or pick up a picnic basket. Highly recommended.
Art Neuendorffer

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Re: 'these guys' : extra puyk!

Post by owlice » Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:28 pm

neufer wrote:
http://tupalo.com/en/amsterdam/puyk wrote:
Share Puyk with your friends

[Puyk] is my favourite restaurant in Amsterdam
Maybe they'll expand to the States. :shock: :shock:
A closed mouth gathers no foot.

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Chris Peterson
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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by Chris Peterson » Mon Oct 25, 2010 2:38 pm

K1NS wrote:But I guess my point was that tiny machines and huge machines still use the same physics. The article above about the microbot on the Lincoln penny supports my point.
And my point was that they don't! A dado blade cuts, and is dependent on the high velocity of the cutting edge relative to the mechanical strength of the material being cut. The mining machine is dependent on the slow speed of the bucket edge compared to the strength of the material. The processes are very different. And even the tiny "robot" is subject to very different forces, and behaves differently than a larger one would, simply because much of the physics involved doesn't scale with size.
Chris

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neufer
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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by neufer » Mon Oct 25, 2010 3:56 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
K1NS wrote:
But I guess my point was that tiny machines and huge machines still use the same physics.
The article above about the microbot on the Lincoln penny supports my point.
And my point was that they don't! A dado blade cuts, and is dependent on the high velocity of the cutting edge relative to the mechanical strength of the material being cut. The mining machine is dependent on the slow speed of the bucket edge compared to the strength of the material. The processes are very different.
  • _____ The Tempest Act 2, Scene 1

    ADRIAN: Tunis was never graced before with such a paragon to their queen.

    GONZALO: Not since widow Dido's time.

    ANTONIO: Widow! a pox o' that! How came that widow in? widow Dido!

    SEBASTIAN: What if he had said 'widower AEneas' too? Good Lord, how you take it!

    ADRIAN: 'Widow Dido' said you? you make me study of that: she was of Carthage, not of Tunis.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dido_%28Queen_of_Carthage%29 wrote:
<<Dido ("Wanderer") was, according to ancient Greek and Roman sources, the founder and first Queen of Carthage (in modern-day Tunisia). She is best known from the account given by the Roman poet Virgil in his Aeneid.

[Dido] and her followers arrived on the coast of North Africa where [Dido] asked the local inhabitants for a small bit of land for a temporary refuge until she could continue her journeying, only as much land as could be encompassed by an oxhide. They agreed. Elissa cut the oxhide into fine strips so that she had enough to encircle an entire nearby hill, which was therefore afterwards named Byrsa "hide". (This event is commemorated in modern mathematics: The "isoperimetric problem" of enclosing the maximum area within a fixed boundary is often called the "Dido Problem" in modern Calculus of variations.) That would become their new home. Many of the locals joined the settlement and both locals and envoys from the nearby Phoenician city of Utica urged the building of a city. In digging the foundations an ox's head was found, indicating a city that would be wealthy but subject to others. Accordingly another area of the hill was dug instead where a horse's head was found, indicating that the city would be powerful in war.>>
Art Neuendorffer

Born2soon

Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by Born2soon » Tue Oct 26, 2010 10:49 am

Machines like the BWE mine the metals to construct the telescopes and spacecraft that generate all the pictures we love. The earth is here for a short time for our use, not for us to worship. There are other worlds to visit, but to see them we must make proper use of Earth. Mankind must spread to live and the BWE will help us accomplish that goal.

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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by neufer » Tue Oct 26, 2010 12:43 pm

Born2soon wrote:
Machines like the BWE mine the metals to construct the telescopes and spacecraft that generate all the pictures we love.
http://paleocave.sciencesortof.com/2010/08/per-ryans-request-the-coal-powered-rocket/ wrote:
Coal-powered rocket design Assumptions:
1. The coal is a “super-coal” that burns extra hot; so hot that an infinite amount of water would never “cool off” the heat exchanger.

2. The water is “super-water” that is mega-dense yet extremely light, so that enough of it can be stored as “fuel” to allow a full flight. It also vaporizes into steam much more violently and with a higher pressure than regular water. I’m calling it “H20-10“.

3. The materials of the heat exchanger and super-coal burner are hereto-unforeseen MEGA-ALLOYS that have no melting point. They can withstand infinite heat without melting, weakening, or creeping.

4. Charlie can shovel coal infinitely fast. This is only barely an assumption…

5. The turbopump is augmented by an external power source to ensure the flow never reverses.

6. The aerodynamic stability of the rocket is handled by either thrust vectoring or fins. The kink in the steam tube will create a pitch-moment
that will need to be corrected for.

7. The heat exchanger is perfectly efficient, so that all of the heat & kinetic energy is removed from the coal smoke and heat source and absorbed by the water.

8. I forgot about Oxygen for Charlie & the coal-room… Sorry Charlie. Assume there’s an infinite amount of oxygen in the coal-room, or that the oxygen bubbles released from the water during vaporization is captured and re-used.

9. Assume the coal-feeder has an infinite amount of super-coal.
Art Neuendorffer

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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by DavidLeodis » Tue Oct 26, 2010 1:41 pm

The 'largest excavators' in the explanation is a link to information (with an image) about the Bagger 288, which is said to be the largest tracked vehicle in the world. The 'Bucket-wheel excavators' is a link to the SwapMeetDave website which has the same image used in the APOD and in its information it says the machine in SwapMeetDave shows the world's largest digging machine. The image there does not however seem quite the same as that in the Bagger 288 info, which seems to have 2 lots of support rods at the top whereas the APOD seems to only have 1 lot. I would be grateful if anyone could let me know if the APOD image shows Bagger 288 or not. It seems to have a number in one of the white areas but, even on enlarging the image, I cannot work out what it states. Thanks. David.

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neufer
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A piece of Krupp.

Post by neufer » Tue Oct 26, 2010 2:13 pm

whatmeworry wrote:
Batteries not included.
The Bagger 288's operation requires 16.56 megawatts of externally supplied electricity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagger_288 wrote:
<<The Bagger 288 (Excavator 288), built by the German company Krupp for the energy and mining firm Rheinbraun, is a bucket-wheel excavator or mobile strip mining machine. When its construction was completed in 1978, Bagger 288 superseded NASA's Crawler-Transporter, used to carry the Space Shuttle and Apollo Saturn V launch vehicle, as the largest tracked vehicle in the world at 13,500 tons. However, the Bagger is powered from an external source and is more correctly described as a mining machine which can be moved, while the crawler-transporter was built as a self-powered, load-carrying vehicle.
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
The Bagger 288 was built for the job of removing overburden prior to coal mining in Tagebau Hambach (stripmine Hambach), Germany. It can excavate 240,000 tons of coal or 240,000 cubic metres of overburden daily – the equivalent of a football field(soccer) dug to 30 m deep. The excavator is up to 220 m long and approximately 96 m high. It can travel 2 to 10 m per minute. The chassis of the main section is 46 m wide and sits on 3 rows of 4 caterpillar track assemblies, each 3.8 m wide. The large surface area of the tracks means the ground pressure of the Bagger 288 is very small (24.8 psi); this allows the excavator to travel over gravel, earth and even grass without leaving a significant track. It has a minimum turning radius of approximately 100 meters, and can climb a maximum gradient of 1:18.

The excavating head itself is 21.6 m in diameter and has 18 buckets each holding 6.6 cubic meters of overburden.

By February 2001, the excavator had completely exposed the coal source at the Tagebau Hambach mine and was no longer needed there. In three weeks it made a 22 kilometer trip to the Garzweiler mine, traveling across Autobahn 61, the river Erft, a railroad line, and several roads. The move cost nearly 150 million German marks and required a team of seventy workers. Rivers were crossed by placing large steel pipes for the water to flow through and providing a smooth surface over the pipes with rocks and gravel. Special grass was seeded to smooth its passage over valuable terrain. Moving Bagger 288 in one piece was more economical than disassembling the excavator and moving it piece by piece.>>
Art Neuendorffer

FreeRadical

Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by FreeRadical » Wed Oct 27, 2010 2:54 am

:?: How about telling us WHERE the picture was taken, ... we know it's on the Earth.

Thanks for any further info.

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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by bystander » Wed Oct 27, 2010 3:13 am

FreeRadical wrote::?: How about telling us WHERE the picture was taken, ... we know it's on the Earth.
From the APOD link: Bucket-wheel excavators
This is the largest digging machine (or trencher or rotating shovel) in the world. It was built by Krupp and is shown here crossing a road in Germany on the way to its destination, an open air coal mine. Although at the mine the treads are unnecessary, it was cheaper to make the machine self-propelled than to try and move it with conventional hauling equipment. Some factoids:
  • The machine is 95 meters high and 215 meters long (almost 2.5 football fields in length)
  • Weight is 45,500 tons (that's equivalent to a bumper to bumper line of jeeps 80 miles long)
  • It took 5 years to design and manufacture at a cost of $100 million
  • Maximum digging speed is 10 meters per minute
  • Can move more than 76,000 cubic meters of coal, rock, and earth per day

mpharo

Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by mpharo » Fri Nov 12, 2010 9:18 pm

A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

That is one interesting vehicle. Even bigger than the prawler? It weighs up to 45.5 kilotons and is the length of more than two football fields. That is one big machine.

Michael

Ken

Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by Ken » Fri Nov 19, 2010 9:39 pm

jamessherman88@yahoocom wrote:
WHen I choose to buy a new 52 inch HD television.. I have chosen to allow children to go hungry, medicine to stay in the warehouse, libraries to close or reduce operating hours. Every financical transaction I make, however seemingly insignificant, moves all of us either towards the life and light....or the other direction.

Yeah but, I bet the movies, "Contact," "Armageddon," and "Close Encounters" look totally SWEET on it! :wink:

I know of some environmental science types who are beginning to document deleterious habitat and species population dynamics effects of solar panel fields and wind mill farms. Winds mills are taking out birds of prey and bats. Solar panel fields create shade that completely alters the underlying habitat.

I gather the real problem is us being here at all. We just can't win. We all need to drink Jim Jones flavored Cool-Aid.... You guys first. :twisted:

As for the photo, it is a kewl pic although I think it is a stretch topically. But it has generated discussion. So, I give it a thumbs up. And it is a repeat. I remember seeing it here before.

aswer

Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by aswer » Mon May 09, 2011 4:09 pm

hey Jamessherman, don't ya think you're being a little hypocritical about people and there HD TVs and heated homes when your using one of the most guilty pieces of technology, your PC, to blog about this. I mean, I don't mean to insult you because we're so surrounded by technology and it's hard to take into account such things. But just remember if your going to drag hungry kids, warehoused medicine and closed libraries onto your soapbox, that people who use computers, ipads, iphones and cell phones are the worst offenders of them all and the worst hypocrites. And be sure to include people like John Travolta, Robert Redford and Al Gore as people who live high on the hog while telling Mr. and Mrs. Everyman that they should go live in a cave.

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Re: APOD: A Bucket Wheel Excavator on Earth (2010 Oct 24)

Post by geckzilla » Mon May 09, 2011 7:30 pm

Oi, here's another monster machine for you...
Image
;)
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.

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