Tv series
TV series
TV series
TV series
TV series
TV Series
Transatlantic Tunnel- So, if you could take the train from New York and in less than an hour reach London, would you do it? What if you had to make the journey through a tunnel 150 feet under the Atlantic? And on a magnetically levitated train traveling at 5,000 mph?
Tokyo's Sky City- It would house 35,000 residents and host 100,000 daily workers, students and visitors. This space-age city in the sky might seem like science fiction, but it answers some questions about where humans might live as our most crowded cities become even more densely populated.
City in a Pyramid- Imagine a self-sustaining pyramid-shaped city in the air. And imagine that it is built by robots and with little help from human workers.
44:32
[Extreme Engineering][S1][E07]_Building Hong Kong's Airport.avi
Building Hong Kong's Airport- In the 1990s, Hong Kong undertook one of the largest civil engineering projects in history when it decided to build a new international airport 16 miles out to sea.
Subways in America- How do you overhaul one of the nation's oldest and most traveled subway systems without shutting down a city for several years? New Yorkers are finding out.
44:32
[Extreme Engineering][S1][E06]_Tunneling Under The Alps.avi
Tunneling Under the Alps- How might Europe be different if the great land barrier of the Alps could easily be traversed via tunnels?
49:31
[Extreme Engineering][S1][E05]_Bridging The Bering Strait.avi
Bridging the Bering Strait- For the first time since the ice age, there could be a bridge across the Bering Strait linking Asia and North America. First, engineers must learn to deal with 55 miles of violent seas and crushing ice over the Arctic Ocean.
Boston's Big Dig- How do you put a new, 10-lane highway 120 feet below downtown Boston without succumbing to crumbling earth, and without endangering the buildings and people above? It's happening right now.
44:32
[Extreme Engineering][S1][E08]_Holland's Barriers To The Sea.avi
Holland's Barriers to the Sea- Most of Holland is below sea level, the nation a drainage basin for three major rivers. Its people have fought back against floods since the Middle Ages. But now, they have massive, computer-controlled sea barriers and dams doing the trick.
44:32
[Extreme Engineering][S1][E10]_Widening The Panama Canal.avi
Widening the Panama Canal- For nearly a century, one of the world's most important waterways has let ships make a commercially critical shortcut between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. But many of today's ships are too big for the man-made canal. Can it be widened?
02:08
Hudson River Plane Landing (US Airways 1549) Animation with Audio
Professional 3D animation, accurately reconstructed to match the event. Learn more at: http://www.scenesystems.com For full HD or broadcast-quality version, contact: getintouch@scenesystems.com While several amateur animations are available on YouTube, these were made in flight simulators or Google Earth. You won't find a better, more realistic, more compelling, or more accurate depiction of this extraordinary event anywhere else on the net. US Airways flight 1549 made an emergency crash-landing into the Hudson River on Thursday, January 15, 2009. All 155 people on board were brought to safety. The miraculous landing took place after the plane struck at least one bird upon takeoff from New York's LaGuardia Airport. Watch the video to see for yourself what really happened: the take-off, flight-path and - crucially - the landing and rescue of passengers. The event has been accurately reconstructed by Scene Systems Inc., 3D Legal Animators based in California, USA. Scene Systems turns complex scene data and expert testimony into powerful 3D animation that helps legal professionals prove their case in court. The animation was produced at very short notice, immediately after the real-life event. This included data sourcing, analysis, modelling, animation, rendering and post-production. This was made possible due to our unique forensic animation engine capable of extremely efficient, high-quality animation production. Find out more on our website: http://www.scenesystems.com/ Thanks for watching.
X-Treme Engineering My last WoW Movie, Rewler - Aman'Thul deleted now Goodbye my Friends :)
gokart w/ jet engine
49:00
Engineering Britain's Superweapons Part 2 - H-Bomb
The dropping of nuclear bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima in 1945 changed the world forever - any nation that failed to harness the power of the atomic bomb suddenly seemed extremely vulnerable. The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction - or 'MAD' - dictates that if two warring nations have access to nuclear weapons, then it would be folly for either side to use them - as the inevitable retaliation to a nuclear strike is, of course, a nuclear strike. So it was that Britain needed to become a nuclear power, and the Hydrogen Bomb - or H-bomb - provided the ultimate destructive force.
Not finding what you want? View results from YouTube.
Comments