id like to see the chain next to something familiar to get an idea of its scale
90mm is like 4 inches thick?
PlebScrubber 2 weeks ago
That is very impressive, both the strength and the failure.
Thank you for sharing this.
IstasPumaNevada 2 weeks ago
Dear All
In this matter Mt is metric ton. 1 Mt = 1.000 Kg
Best regards
Peter Harbo A/S
75130844 1 month ago
okay.. so Mt (megaton) is meant to be mt which stands for metric ton (1mt=1000kg)
BadWithNames123 1 month ago
Dam thats alot of force behind that chain
hpibajajumper 1 month ago
Only Chuck Norris can do that...but he still needs both hands...
dougspair 2 months ago
fatality
danielraul1989 3 months ago
cant break...
maxdax55 3 months ago
wow
ddddcheaper 3 months ago
made in china?
FSstudios1 3 months ago
@FSstudios1 Let's see how well you do with 778 mega tons pulling on you
Badchoicesmade 3 months ago
Sparks. A nice hi-frame camera would be interesting.
dxutube 3 months ago
Woah!
The chain is strong but the hydraulic test rig it takes to break it is the beast.
hammerogod 3 months ago
BOOSH!
Tadesan 4 months ago
Holly f$#%%^# is all i can say. Incredible
sirazzatron 4 months ago
almost shit my pants when i heard the snap BOOOOOOOOOM!!!!!!
skillsFORkills100 4 months ago
I cant stop watching this LOL!!!! thats just crazy
anthony1bad351 4 months ago
@flyer203 Thanks for taking the time to see the movie.
Yes it is a lot of energy & force releaset and working on deck one must be cautious.
We will soon uploade more clips like this.
Once again thanks for watching.
Peter Harbo A/S
75130844 4 months ago
@75130844 778 "Mt peak load".. so am i right that it is 778 million ton???
because Mt stands for Mega Ton which is 1 Million..
that is pretty crazy..
BadWithNames123 2 months ago in playlist Weitere Videos von 75130844
I worked as a Cadet on a ship but I could never imagine the force it would require such a thick piece of metal to break.Nor the damage it would cause.
I am glad I didn't see something similar while on board.
flyer203 5 months ago
very interesting, I happen to be a metallurgical engineer and of course it is very usefull information, but it would be complete if you could show us the deformed chain after the test, really a piece of knowledge!
IQM8993 10 months ago 2
id like to see the chain next to something familiar to get an idea of its scale
90mm is like 4 inches thick?
PlebScrubber 2 weeks ago
That is very impressive, both the strength and the failure.
Thank you for sharing this.
IstasPumaNevada 2 weeks ago
Dear All
In this matter Mt is metric ton. 1 Mt = 1.000 Kg
Best regards
Peter Harbo A/S
75130844 1 month ago
okay.. so Mt (megaton) is meant to be mt which stands for metric ton (1mt=1000kg)
BadWithNames123 1 month ago
Dam thats alot of force behind that chain
hpibajajumper 1 month ago
Only Chuck Norris can do that...but he still needs both hands...
dougspair 2 months ago
fatality
danielraul1989 3 months ago
cant break...
maxdax55 3 months ago
wow
ddddcheaper 3 months ago
made in china?
FSstudios1 3 months ago
@FSstudios1 Let's see how well you do with 778 mega tons pulling on you
Badchoicesmade 3 months ago
Sparks. A nice hi-frame camera would be interesting.
dxutube 3 months ago
Woah!
The chain is strong but the hydraulic test rig it takes to break it is the beast.
hammerogod 3 months ago
BOOSH!
Tadesan 4 months ago
Holly f$#%%^# is all i can say. Incredible
sirazzatron 4 months ago
almost shit my pants when i heard the snap BOOOOOOOOOM!!!!!!
skillsFORkills100 4 months ago
I cant stop watching this LOL!!!! thats just crazy
anthony1bad351 4 months ago
@flyer203 Thanks for taking the time to see the movie.
Yes it is a lot of energy & force releaset and working on deck one must be cautious.
We will soon uploade more clips like this.
Once again thanks for watching.
Best regards
Peter Harbo A/S
75130844 4 months ago
@75130844 778 "Mt peak load".. so am i right that it is 778 million ton???
because Mt stands for Mega Ton which is 1 Million..
that is pretty crazy..
BadWithNames123 2 months ago in playlist Weitere Videos von 75130844
I worked as a Cadet on a ship but I could never imagine the force it would require such a thick piece of metal to break.Nor the damage it would cause.
I am glad I didn't see something similar while on board.
flyer203 5 months ago
very interesting, I happen to be a metallurgical engineer and of course it is very usefull information, but it would be complete if you could show us the deformed chain after the test, really a piece of knowledge!
IQM8993 10 months ago 2