How Do They Do It?

How Do They Do It?

S15E13 - Car Siberia to Sahara; Baseball Gloves

19.3. 18:00
Discovery
30 minutes
2017

How do they take a car from Siberia to the Sahara without leaving Germany? Plus, how do they hand craft a baseball glove that will last a lifetime?

More information
Available in 5 days
S04E01

Forest Fires; Car Exhaust; Space Station

29.4. 18:00, Discovery, 30 minutes

Forest Fires; Car Exhaust; Space Station

Go beneath the surface to understand forest fires, car exhaust and the space station.

Available in 6 days
S04E02

Spacesuit; Diesel Engines; Neon Signs

30.4. 18:00, Discovery, 30 minutes

Spacesuit; Diesel Engines; Neon Signs

How a spacesuit keeps an astronaut alive, the diesel engines that power the world's biggest ships, and the manufacturing processes behind the famous neon signs which cover Las Vegas

Similar shows

The Proof is Out There
How It's Made
Baggage Battles
Colossal Machines
Food Factory USA
How Do Animals Do That?
Wheeler Dealers
Salvage Hunters
Alaskan Crab Fishing (pracovní název)

About show

Czech, English, Hungarian
2017

How Do They Do It? is a television series produced by Wag TV for Discovery Channel. Each programme explores how 2 or 3 ordinary objects are made and used. The show's slogan is "Behind the ordinary is the extraordinary." The series is broadcast throughout the world on various Discovery-owned networks including:

⁕Discovery Channel, Science Channel, DMAX and Quest in the United Kingdom;

⁕Science Channel in the United States;

⁕Discovery Channel in Asia, Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Spain, Switzerland, The Netherlands;

⁕Discovery Channel and Discovery Science in Italy.

Series 1 and 2, which were co-produced with Rocket Surgery Productions, were narrated by Rupert Degas; series 3 and 4 were narrated by Iain Lee; and series 5 and 6 were narrated by Dominic Frisby. In 2008, the UK's Channel 5 begin airing the series, presented by Robert Llewellyn. This version was released on DVD in the UK in May 2010.

In the United States, the series airs on the Science Channel and is narrated by Chris Broyles.

This programme is similar to the popular Canadian-produced documentary programme, How It's Made, also broadcast on Discovery Channel networks.