The hill is named Supertest after one of the original oil companies to purchase mineral rights around the highway alignment route. If I remember correctly Syncrude now owns the mineral rights to this land.
Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet - On the road - Alberta, Canada (2006) police army Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet - On the road - Alberta, Canada (2006) Zombie Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet PTC 35 DS exo Ring Crane | Lego city fire truck, controlled
Alberta has a highway infrastructure that was intentionally built for moving very large equipment including vessels and supersized pipe modules and can handle the largest loads in North America. There are several fabrication shops in and around Edmonton supplying the oilsands projects surrounding Fort McMurray as well as the conventional oil and gas operations and other industries in Alberta. Corridors are built for loads up to 30 or 42 feet high, 30' wide and just about as long as you want and intentionally bypass the highways that have overpasses (www.alberta.ca/assets/documents/trans-high-load-corridors-map.pdf). That said, there really is very little between Fort Saskatchewan ( just NE of Edmonton) and Fort McMurray ...
The hill is named Supertest after one of the original oil companies to purchase mineral rights around the highway alignment route. If I remember correctly Syncrude now owns the mineral rights to this land.
Ah the good ol' days, when the Canadian government actually remembered to acknowledge Alberta as part of the country
Wonderful, well done commercial for Mammoet.
Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet - On the road - Alberta, Canada (2006) police army
Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet - On the road - Alberta, Canada (2006) Zombie
Hamlet Trương 👷♂Mammoet PTC 35 DS exo Ring Crane | Lego city fire truck, controlled
Best metric units 1:05
9:41. Wow that’s a strong Canadian accent. Doesn’t even sound like English.
It's dutch..
Dutch Roots!
Why are edmonton police @ Hwy 14 & Hwy 21?
No such thing as 0600 pm!
Supertest & thé bridge to nowhere
Highways 2 and 63
How in the hell did that fit under the bridges?? Of did it not pass under a single bridge in 775km! Man, how underdeveloped is Alberta
Alberta has a highway infrastructure that was intentionally built for moving very large equipment including vessels and supersized pipe modules and can handle the largest loads in North America. There are several fabrication shops in and around Edmonton supplying the oilsands projects surrounding Fort McMurray as well as the conventional oil and gas operations and other industries in Alberta. Corridors are built for loads up to 30 or 42 feet high, 30' wide and just about as long as you want and intentionally bypass the highways that have overpasses (www.alberta.ca/assets/documents/trans-high-load-corridors-map.pdf).
That said, there really is very little between Fort Saskatchewan ( just NE of Edmonton) and Fort McMurray ...
Oops, wrong cops. , I should have paid more attention.
Nope you saw right, that was Edmonton police. Not sure why the RCMP would not have been there instead.
Umm