Military Escorts and Demolished Toll Booths: The Ultimate Heavy Haul

This 50-story metallic monster is officially the largest propane-propylene splitter tower on Earth—and moving it was a $7,000,000 logistics nightmare. Weighing in at a mind-boggling 5.7 million pounds (2,800+ US tons), this mega load required over 1,200 heavy-duty hydraulic wheels, military-grade police escorts, and the temporary destruction of highway toll booths to complete a grueling 4.2-mile crawl. If you love heavy haul trucking, massive engineering, and insane mega moves, this video is for you. 👉 Subscribe for more insane engineering & mega moves: https://bit.ly/4v7YCh6 TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - The 2,800-Ton Monster Explained 0:50 - The $7,000,000 Shipping Bill 1:53 - Why They Had to Tear Down Toll Booths 2.20 - How it Actually Moves (SPMT) 2:55 - How 1,200+ Wheels Don’t Crush the Road 3:59 - Why Can’t We Just Fly It? 4:35 - The 5,500-Ton Final Hoist ABOUT THIS VIDEO: In this episode of @ProcessAddicted We take an inside look at one of the most expensive and dangerous heavy transport operations in history. Manufactured in Ningbo and hauled to Penglai, this massive industrial tower pushed the absolute limits of SPMT (Self-Propelled Modular Transporter) technology and heavy crane rigging. Watch Next: ✅ The Most Extreme Heavy Transport in China 👉   • 600 Tons, 300 Tires, One Lane: The Most Ex...   ✅ 130 miles in 30 Days: The Most Dangerous Transport 👉   • 130 miles in 30 Days: The Most Dangerous T...   ✅ Inside the Most Dangerous Crane Lift in Extreme Weather👉   • Inside the Most Dangerous Crane Lift in Ex...   #HeavyHaul #MegaMoves #Engineering #Trucking #Logistics #HeavyMachinery #MegaStructures Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for [fair use] for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statutes that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. This video could contain certain copyrighted video clips, pictures, or photographs that were not specifically authorized to be used by the copyright holder(s), but which we believe in good faith are protected by federal law and the fair use doctrine for one or more of the reasons noted above.