Didn't a french guy do all this earlier, hmm .....I,m sure he showed all this quite a while ago.
@ColinJ8815 күн бұрын
Yes. Jean Pierre Houdin came up with this theory long ago. No one gives him credit sadly.
@kevinnistor1954Ай бұрын
Wtf is this robo dude in the corner tryna convince me its his voice im hearing. I would have watched this if that wasn't there but its weird i dont want everything on this platform to turn into weird shit like this
@tommyguyishereАй бұрын
I use to see it that way too. However the guy probably doesn’t speak English so you don’t want to hear that with English. U C
@TopazBadger6550Ай бұрын
Pro-Tip: The Megalithic Pyramids were not built by the Dynastic Egyptians. They were not tombs. As long as you cling to that easily disprovable paradigm, the mystery will persist.
@user-rv8wb1nl1b23 күн бұрын
er , they left texts with evidence of the builds , so . . . . no.
@TopazBadger655023 күн бұрын
@user-rv8wb1nl1b No, they didn't. Stop lying.
@josefsterling546218 күн бұрын
@@TopazBadger6550 so what were they in your opinion? Some far fetched power stations used to harvest souls etc.......🙄
@TopazBadger655018 күн бұрын
@josefsterling5462 The Tomb hypothesis is not supported by the evidence at all. My opinion on their function is irrelevant.
@user-rv8wb1nl1b18 күн бұрын
@@TopazBadger6550 read on / up .
@SimonFloryPhotographyАй бұрын
With every new video you produce, I am more and more impressed by the detailed manner in which you explain how the practicalities of pyramid construction was done. One of the better KZbin channels - you and your work deserve a much wider audience!
@stevett225Ай бұрын
@@SimonFloryPhotography thank you so much, with the advancement of ai I can make more of these videos. I tend to stutter and stammer through them. I know ai and avatar isn’t the greatest way but it really helps me. Please like and especially share the links xxxx
@stevett225Ай бұрын
@@SimonFloryPhotography oh! and buy the book if you can xx
@somedudesstuff801Ай бұрын
Interesting hypothesis about the use of the small passages. Though it's not quite consistent with the evidence. -Yes, a rope would probably go through them, but the bends and curves (that didn't have to be there), add a lot of unnecessary friction. I'd like to see a full scale test to see if even a modern rope would be able to handle the surface. -If coarse manila-like rope caused all that wear to the stone box with no load, where's the wear in the passages under load? -the tool marks on the passages are still visible, in a sequence supporting evidence the openings themselves were likely cut after the passages were placed, just like the queens chamber. The wood components are interesting. There is clearly a lot of evidence of wood around the place, which contradicts my preconceived notions of the region only having short scrubby trees.
@MrTL3wisАй бұрын
You're either an engineer or think like one. I had the exact same thoughts about the wrapping friction of the ropes. Going through that passage alone would probably double the necessary pulling forces.
@somedudesstuff801Ай бұрын
@MrTL3wis I do a lot of rope access work. The friction is a problem but the least problem. The passages lead up to the air rather than easier straight paths going horizontal to somewhere you can actually pull from. The higher you go, the less area to stand and the bigger the problem. More than having to hire extra guys to pull would be the rub patterns. A modern slick plastic rope will scuff steel. An ancient coarse rope contaminated with sand rubbing for the thousands of lifts would leave serious marks in soft limestone that the passages don't have.
@stevett225Ай бұрын
go to 8.30 on this video, another machine on the pyramid plateau pulls the rope from the chamber see kzbin.info/www/bejne/lZi5i42ElpiLl7csi=3SkH4QkTXdm5HGmx
@somedudesstuff801Ай бұрын
@@stevett225 Ropes did not run through those passages. Hundreds of miles of length of rope loaded with millions of tons of stone absolutely did not. There are lots of issues with that hypothesis, but to anyone who's spent any real time around ropes it's an obvious nonstarter. Designing a hypothetical machine to fix a different hypothetical machine isn't good science either, it only makes the lack of evidence worse. Facts. The geometry of the passages is bad for that use. You'd be hard pressed to come up with a worse geometry. Facts. The east/west passage blocks were identical to common gutter block. It would have been easier to make the geometry suitable than what they actually did. Facts. The soft limestone has zero physical evidence of rope damage at any friction points anywhere along the crooked passages, which even an unloaded rope would absolutely do especially at that scale. There's no way around it. Facts. The queen's chamber east/west passages were sealed from construction until now, only partially opened in the modern era. Considering the queen's chamber, and the tool marks on the king's chamber, it's highly likely the passages weren't even opened up until the finishing phase after construction was completed. There are lots of problems with the east/west passage hypothesis, but the debunk is the lack of rope damage. It's baffling how you'd claim the hard granite box has rope damage from unloaded ropes, but the soft limestone passages under extremely heavy load would leave zero marks. Ropes simply did not run through those specific passages.
@46captainsАй бұрын
I've been thinking the air shafts were for ropes as well but this is the first time I've heard anyone else talk about or elaborate on the theory. Good work man, very interesting.
@ThrashLawPatentsAndTMsАй бұрын
Lead by Mr. Tasker, this is "our" gathering place.
@ColinJ8815 күн бұрын
This is Jean Pierre Houdins theory. He should be credited, not Mark Lehner or anyone else.
@mrmanch204Ай бұрын
This is very commendable work imo, some of the ideas are worthy and thought provoking, some don't quite marry up in my understanding, but what do I know? One thing I am absolutely sure of is that the designers and producers of this construction are not who mainstream archaeology doggedly maintain they are.
@stevett225Ай бұрын
@@mrmanch204 the main thing you have to bear in mind is this, all the heavier stone’s were placed on the pyramid at the beginning and levered up. Everybody thinks the pyramid was built using one technique, if you look at my other videos particularly the link in the description (did the djed help build the) . The best way anyone can support this channel is to share. ❤️
@patrickjamesmurphy28 күн бұрын
They were not tombs and are much older than 4,500 years. they predate the dynastic Egyptians.
@stevett22527 күн бұрын
They are tombs and they are Dynastic
@anvilbrunner.2013Күн бұрын
Man looks like Alistair Crowley. Must be related somewhere down the line. * Genius though. Best theory ever.
@stevett225Күн бұрын
@@anvilbrunner.2013 ha ha cheers 🥂 try this one kzbin.info/www/bejne/jXbZY5KgrM2CjKMsi=mm17t6L7jOJ-dpKo
@kristianmorris9738Ай бұрын
How is it only now KZbin has recommended this channel to me?
@stevett225Ай бұрын
@@kristianmorris9738 I’m glad they did 🤔
@MrTL3wisАй бұрын
I think you might have something here in terms of the vertical supports, but there's just no way these stones were dragged up the side. The forces don't work. You've come up with a fine idea, but there is precious little evidence to support it...damn near none...yet you're giving out dimensions to the centimeter. C'mon, guy.
@stevett225Ай бұрын
I agree the heaviest of the stones, anything over say 5 ton was dragged up using a different machine. See the last part of this video kzbin.info/www/bejne/lZi5i42ElpiLl7csi=TgABZrTki7kB_jBs
@MrTL3wisАй бұрын
@@stevett225 OK, watched it and gave a like. Let's say your device works exactly as advertised. Support your claim this is how they did it. I see no evidence from the Egyptians themselves or from excavation that these types of machines were even in existence, much less widespread use. It would maybe be a way to potentially do it, but you're working backwards. They were coming at it from the other side of history. I bet they were thinking in a completely different way than we would.
@stevett225Ай бұрын
@ backwards is exactly how reverse engineering works!
@MrTL3wisАй бұрын
@@stevett225 Cute, but no.
@kawasakikev8905Ай бұрын
@@stevett225 you can't backward engineer and come up with a solution the egyptians didn't have , much like the bore holes and copper tube cutters theory ,firstly you need to provide the proof of the existence of the pulleys and mechanical apparatus first , then backward engineer a working example that shows how it would have worked .
@jackm2293Ай бұрын
amazing. your passion is impressive. ❤🙏
@zemog1025Ай бұрын
Interesting, is this theory also applicable to the other large pyramids?
@stevett225Ай бұрын
The djed pillar which is at the heart of this hypothesis is carved into the underground system of the step pyramid, so short answer is yes. but was it the same technique, i think similar but not the same.
@-ScottyАй бұрын
I believe Geoffrey Drumm cracked the code. The Land of Chem.
@TeeCee_LuckeeАй бұрын
Drumm claims the blocks get smaller as the pyramid gets higher, yet some of the largest blocks are in the king's Chambers lol. His wife is great, he's yet another Hebrew tool to spread misinformation so no one ever figures out the truth. Not necessarily their purpose but to cover up his ancestors crimes
@ThrashLawPatentsAndTMsАй бұрын
Excellent work! I'm particularly impressed with the design modelling (Autocad?). Are you also the software to estimate the forces in the structure and construction tools/materials? IMO, this is getting really close. PS: Notice the pully shims? To my eye they may evoke the "spines" in the Osiris column.
@stevett22517 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/jXbZY5KgrM2CjKM
@davidpoole5595Ай бұрын
These spools are still inside the pyramid...behind some walls you will find the remains of these Hieroglyphs that show them being used
@stevett225Ай бұрын
probably!
@KevinRiley-gg9qgАй бұрын
I thought that when they built pyramid there was no wheels pulleys etc.
@skookydook70238 күн бұрын
Good effort , love the models , but I don’t think so .
@66cq2fmАй бұрын
hell yeah brotha
@murrayclaus359525 күн бұрын
Great pyramid was used to be at one with God's. Make one self as a God. Become pure of Heart. An separate body from soul in order to through the false door to speak to Gods
@memberHDАй бұрын
What in the ai is this
@Gbizz1985Ай бұрын
I'm convinced the grand gallery was used as a counterweight to pull the massive granite blocks up to build the king's chamber.
@murrayclaus359525 күн бұрын
Looking in mirror see camera man
@stevett22525 күн бұрын
@@murrayclaus3595 ?
@TopazBadger6550Ай бұрын
The box was used to store ropes. Ok, this might be the 2nd dumbest idea I ever heard. Do better.
@josefsterling546219 күн бұрын
Ah yes because super Saiyan African Egyptians lifting them with their psyonic powers is much more plausable.....🤦🏻♂️
@TopazBadger655019 күн бұрын
@josefsterling5462 did I say that?
@josefsterling546219 күн бұрын
@@TopazBadger6550 what was the first dumbest idea u ever heard? I'm guessing it was listening to yourself as you typed that comment 🤣🤣🤣🤣