I don’t see how you’d get 1000 L into a cubic metre… but how many thousands of litres does that bucket hold? Would be quite handy in the event of a major fire outbreak near a decent water supply.
In imperial units, this simple calculation becomes a computational nightmare with endless conversions. How much is this in serious units? I’m not wasting time with googling the conversion.
The excavator is a Leibherr mining excavator. It appears to be either model R 995 (which has a 35 cyd bucket) or R 9800 (which has a 55 cyd bucket). That means the weight of the water it will hold is about 29 tons or 45 tons.
I think it broke…
>How to Crush Your Car with only One Bucket of Water
Fixed.
It also cleans your seats and dash!
Water is seriously underestimated.
You can’t say it’s a car anymore, either.
Convertibles are still cars.
What would happen to you if you stood there? Meat pie?
Beaten to death. Squashed.
Imagine having that much sand or something dropped on you. Water doesn’t weigh as much but it certainly weighs enough.
A cubic metre of water weighs a tonne. That shovel looks like it would hold fifteen cubic metres easy….
What is this “cubic metre” of which you speak?
Approximately 35 cubic feet to us Yanks.
Metric system? Too mainstream
Or 1 gallon=8.34 lbs
1 litre = 1 kilogram.
1000 L = 1 tonne
I don’t see how you’d get 1000 L into a cubic metre… but how many thousands of litres does that bucket hold? Would be quite handy in the event of a major fire outbreak near a decent water supply.
Missed a bit.
How long does it take to fill that bucket up with water?
As I am sure a carwash could clean 2 cars, (one after another), faster than it would take to reload that bucket..
Unfortunately the carwash will also scratch the car’s paint WAY worse than that thing though.
Not long if there’s a convenient lake or swimming pool the bucket can dip into.
You think this didn’t scratch the car ?
Let’s say the construction bucket is 4′ x 4′ x 5′ in size.
The volume would be 800 cubic feet.
Water weighs 62.3 pounds per cubic foot.
So 800 cu. ft. x 62.3 pounds = 4,984 pounds, or 2 1/2 tons.
Dropped on a car at once.
Correction – It’s only 80 cubic feet, but the weight is the same.
a 4′x4′x5′ bucket would be smaller than the car, not 3 to 5 times as big like this one.
I’ll trust Mike’s answer below.
In imperial units, this simple calculation becomes a computational nightmare with endless conversions. How much is this in serious units? I’m not wasting time with googling the conversion.
That is no doubt a Liebherr 9800 excavator.
The bucket holds about 42 cubic metres of water,
This translates to 42000 liters, which weighs 42000 kilogram.
How to Sqwash a car…
Hmmm, I guess it was *wait for it* Hard, water!! lololololol
yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Wash out! You gonna get wet.
The excavator is a Leibherr mining excavator. It appears to be either model R 995 (which has a 35 cyd bucket) or R 9800 (which has a 55 cyd bucket). That means the weight of the water it will hold is about 29 tons or 45 tons.
This was a from publicity stunt made by Leibherr They also made one showing an excavator climbing a 20M tower, it’s awesome.
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=RobaJKGMMiE
This was a from publicity stunt made by Leibherr They also made one showing an excavator climbing a 20M tower, it’s awesome.
I tried to put in a link but it is being m0derated. Just got to you tube and put in leibherr excavator tower climb
Da** im tired
*go to
*it’s