Mining trucks, those giant, building-sized dump trucks that make the human beings operating them look like Lego minifigs, can weigh hundreds of tons—the mighty Caterpillar 797B tips the scale at a mind-blowing 308 tons—and many of its contemporaries weigh anywhere from 180 tons to 240 tons. For comparison's sake, a GE Evolution diesel locomotive weighs in at 208 tons.
Diesel Power magazine, in a 2008 article on the world's 10 largest dump trucks, points out that these vehicles' massive dimensions generally call for them to be shipped to work locations in pieces and then assembled on site, as they're nigh impossible to transport over the road in one piece.
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But evidently, there are exceptions. And the tool for the job? A Mercedes-Benz Actros semi tractor, which, in heavy-duty trim, has a max capacity of up to 250 tons. This cartoonish photo was tweeted by the official MBUSA account on Twitter last week.
No choice on a Wednesday afternoon but to keep on truckin'. http://ift.tt/1o3gGBj h/t @MercedesBenz
— Mercedes-Benz USA (@MBUSA) April 23, 2014
This story originally appeared on roadandtrack.com
from Car and Driver Blog http://ift.tt/nSHy27
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