Machines: How They Work
A look at how a 3-D printer, a cross trainer, and a kitchen mixer really work.
A look at how a 3-D printer, a cross trainer, and a kitchen mixer really work.
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The city of New Orleans works on constructing the world's strongest hurricane protection system.
Danny Forster explores a massive, one of the world's largest hydroelectric projects in Brazil.
The Sands SkyPark rests 650 feet in the air, built on top of three skyscrapers in Singapore.
Richard Hammond investigates the tech that allows big engineering projects.
Richard Hammond goes behind-the-scenes of the world's longest underground railway connection.
Richard Hammond meets the engineering team that runs one of the biggest dams on earth.
Richard Hammond travels to a giant oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico.
A new stadium features a retractable soccer field that rolls back to reveal a world-first NFL field.
Richard visits Dubai and his mission is to climb the biggest lightening conductor in the world.
A cargo vessel uses the latest tech to deliver vital materials on a nonstop 28,000-mile voyage.
Aboard the US Air Force's biggest cargo plane, an airborne behemoth that uses cutting-edge tech.
Richard investigates the gigantic Volkswagen car factory and its futuristic technology.
One of the countries in the United Arab Emirates has an indoor alpine ski resort.
Gotthard Base Tunnel creates a flat-rail link for future travel through the Alps.
The Woodrow Wilson Bridge spans the Potomac River connecting Virginia and Maryland.
A team of experts builds an impressive cable car on Hong Kong's Lantau Island.
Constructing El Cajon Dam on the Rio Grande de Santiago in Mexico.
Europe's first liquefied natural-gas plant.
If a giant roach motel can trap a human; if a spider's web is really stronger than steel.
Using a fire extinguisher to propel a person in space; no one in space can hear one scream.
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