S1 E1: Ice Resurfacer
Why are we all so mesmerized by this slow, clumsy-looking machine that resurfaces the ice between periods in a hockey game?
23 minutes
Why are we all so mesmerized by this slow, clumsy-looking machine that resurfaces the ice between periods in a hockey game?
23 minutes
The beauty and elegance of an experienced snowboarder would make us think that this sport has roots that go back far longer than 40 years.
23 minutes
From Inuit sleds that rode on rails made from frozen fish to the high-tech luge, that can scream downhill at 90 mph, the winter toboggan - in all its forms - has been the essential vehicle for moving things around in winter.
23 minutes
Though most often associated with Canada, the snowmobile was in fact invented by Carl Eliason of Wisconsin in 1927. Mounted on runners, it was a basic machine, with parts taken from bicycles and a Model-T Ford.
23 minutes
It all started in 1955 with two tin cans and a vacuum cleaner. The interest was to figure out how to reduce drag on ships as they plough through water.
23 minutes
It is said that at one point in our life we will all use one. No longer just a seat on wheels, the modern wheelchair transforms its user into a space-age cyborg.
23 minutes
They are the most common form of transportation in North America, although often taken for granted by their riders.
23 minutes
Fifty years after the first Beaver and Otter bush planes came into service, and 37 years after the last one was built, almost 1,500 are still flying.
23 minutes
Forty years ago it promised to be a passing fad that would end on the top shelf of a K-Mart toy section.
30 minutes
The fastest can go 404.97 miles per hour. What began as a tub on wheels has evolved into a marvel of design and engineering.
30 minutes
First invented as a 4th century toy for children in China, the idea of rotary flight didn't really take off for another 16 centuries.
30 minutes
Canadian paddling guru Bill Mason once said, "First God created a canoe; then He created a country to go with it."
30 minutes
Half boat, half car - the design of amphibious vehicles has challenged inventors since 1899. But the carboat has been a reality not only for James Bond.
23 minutes
The first successful emulation of birds involved running down a hill with a lightweight glider, taking off into the air and gliding down.
23 minutes
You are barreling down the track at 60 mph, taking hairpin turns and death-defying loops.
30 minutes
Since 1817 when Baron von Drais invented a walking machine that would help him tour the royal gardens faster, humans have used bicycles as an easy way to get around.
23 minutes
What do a sheep, a duck and a rooster have in common? They were the first passengers in Joseph and Etienne de Montgolfiers' wonderful invention in 1783.
30 minutes
A hundred and ten years ago the Canadian Motor Syndicate unveiled a new line of electric motor transports expecting they'd sell like hot cakes.
23 minutes
They began as heavy steam-powered monsters until, in 1919, Harry Ferguson mounted a mechanically operated plough on the back of a Model T Ford.
23 minutes
The first steam engine locomotives of the industrial revolution maxed out at a top speed of 8 miles per hour, slower than we can run.
23 minutes
NASCAR racer Tony Stewart is an enthusiast and rocker Neil Young wrote a song about his.
23 minutes
Without them Ulysses would not have had an Odyssey, Columbus 'discovered' the New World, or Napoleon and Nelson fought the Battle of Trafalgar.
23 minutes
The open road, the purr of the engine under you. People have been modifying their bikes since Howard Roper invented a coal-powered, two-cylinder, steam-engine for his bicycle in 1867.
23 minutes
The proliferation of modern long-distance air-travel can be credited to the jet engine.
23 minutes
Twenty-six of them cross the U.S.-Canada border every minute, their work represents a $48 billion business in North America and driving one is the most popular job for Canadian males.
23 minutes
Sirens, lights, and head-turning speeds, these 4-wheeled predators are some of the highest performing automobiles on the road.
23 minutes
Skiing has reached a popularity and penetration far beyond the wildest dreams of its pioneers.
23 minutes
Classified as Armored Fighting Vehicles, they are exactly as the name suggests.
23 minutes
Over the years medical technicians have saved countless lives rushing to the scene in the ambulance.
23 minutes
They are speedy urban subterranean creatures that have near total separation from other traffic.
23 minutes
Much older than Disco, the first roller-skate rink opened in 1867 in Massachusetts.
23 minutes
It has fins and can ride the waves as gracefully as the fish that live beneath it but there's no reason to run from the water, this thing doesn't bite.
23 minutes
It can make kindling of your living room couch in under one minute. It is arguably one of the most indispensable vehicles in the city.
23 minutes
Originally designed as a sturdier alternative to the tent, this enclosed piece of equipment with wheels has become the permanent home of people known as "full timers".
23 minutes
Not so much a vehicle, more a way of life, the taxicab has been around at least since Julius Caesar arrived at the Rubicon in a hired cart in 49 BC.
23 minutes
Ever wonder what it was like to drive at 230 mph three inches from the ground?
23 minutes
They are lean, mean racing machines. Stock cars, named for their assembly-line origins, are not your typical automobiles.
23 minutes
Flying horses, whirligigs, roundabouts, riding galleries, carry-us-alls, spinning jinnies, hobby horses, gallopers and of course, merry-go-rounds.
30 minutes
Not so long ago, fresh fish was a luxury item enjoyed by the wealthy few who could afford to spend time at the seaside or pay to have fish delivered to them.
23 minutes
The problem of lifting heavy objects has occupied mankind since ancient times. In fact the first documentary evidence of a crane can be found in a bas-relief carving from a family tomb in Rome.
23 minutes
Ultralights are some of the wackiest and most exhilarating aircraft ever invented. They developed during the 70s and 80s as a response to the high cost of recreational flying.
23 minutes
We are a people on the move. Since homo erectus took his first upright steps, he has striven to make the act of walking easier and faster.
23 minutes
Have you ever wondered just how they managed to build that tunnel under the English Channel or how they transport the huge quantities of oil-laced sand in the Alberta oil sands?
23 minutes