LEAP FORWARD in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com Tilt Levering Cages + platformstairs on all sides.

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  • 게시일 2022. 07. 12.
  • Hi, my name is Bernard Mullers. I think I've figured out a method the Egyptians may have used to build the pyramids in the time frame presented by history.
    www.enim-egyptologie.fr/revue/...
    I realize it's been a mystery for centuries, but the simplest presented solution, two bipod masts from shipbuilding combined with keeling [a ship] presented here, could be the right one. Mine is a simple workable and tested possible solution. Now it's up to scientists to prove me right or wrong, either way it'll be interesting.
    Anyhow, the authoritive scientific magazine Équipe Égypte Nilotique et Méditerranéenne have checked out my idea and proved it feasible...a great honour. Check it out here:
    www.enim-egyptologie.fr/revue/... or Pyramid-Building-Principles.com and look for the National Geographic StopMotion: • LEAP FORWARD in Pyrami... .

댓글 • 264

  • @PINTandDALE
    @PINTandDALE 년 전 +41

    After watching the silly, but entertaining videos involving goat bladders and floating granite blocks -- your method is refreshingly simple and elegant.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전 +1

      Dear Mr. William Pint,
      Thanks for your kind words.
      I would like to invite you to have a look at the article:
      Bernard Mullers, Andrew Borgart, Olaf E. Kaper, Bert Bast, Egbert Kuipers Building pyramids.
      Reconstructing the process of lifting stones (ENiM 15, p. 245-264 - 24 juin 2022)
      In the article about Mr. Herodotus who visited Egypt 500 B.C.E. He gives a description from tradition of how
      the pyramids were built. This description in the article corresponds aptly with my in real tested work method.
      And please read the last paragraph of the website (English version):
      Pyramid Building Principles
      Could it be that the hieroglyph of a pyramid indicates the hieroglyph of the tool given the striking resemblance
      to a Mullers-Tilt Levering Cage. Look at the three foto’s and see the very similarities in detail of Mr. Pyramid
      and a tool like the Mullers-Tilt Levering Cage.
      Haven't we been looking for ages at the solution in the hieroglyph of how pyramids were built?
      Hope to hear from you.
      Regards,
      Bernard Mullers

    • @HBK360MUSIC
      @HBK360MUSIC 년 전

      If you think granite blocks floating is silly I can’t imagine what you’d think of a several thousand ton military ship floating

    • @PINTandDALE
      @PINTandDALE 년 전 +4

      @@HBK360MUSIC That ship floats by displacing several thousand tons of water. Floating the granite block would require enough goat bladders to displace the weight of the solid, multi-ton block -- that's a LOT of bladders to inflate and keep watertight and tie to each and every granite block - and a HUGE enclosed water 'escalator' to float each block up the side of the structure. The plan also calls for the blocks to break the surface for leveling purposes -- so you must tie those bladders UNDERNEATH each block, not just fastening the block beneath the huge mass of bladders. This tilt cage proposal seems infinitely more simple to execute and makes the floating method, in my opinion, look - yes- silly.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      @@PINTandDALEHundreds of simple TLCs were located on dozens of giant stairs on all sides of the pyramid, in teams of 40 the stones were tilted up.
      See the TLC tilt carousel in real life at Pyramid-Building-Principles.com.

    • @anthonyxuereb792
      @anthonyxuereb792 10 개월 전

      Yes the animation was very well done and I found it entertaining to. Unless we find a time capsule explaining how they were built we will never know for sure. In the meantime it's good to see what people come up with, they're not short on ideas.

  • @simongross3122
    @simongross3122 9 개월 전 +2

    That is so simple and believable. Don't know if that's how they did it, but it just proves that simple leverage works and that there clearly is a way to build a pyramid using simple techniques. If there's one way to do it, there will be others :)

  • @louispepin3659
    @louispepin3659 9 개월 전 +1

    Brilliant! The most plausible solution to the pyramid enigma.

  • @johnnynielsen3006
    @johnnynielsen3006 10 개월 전 +1

    Wally Wallinton got videos on moving, lifting and placing Stonehenge sized blocks with seesaw motion.
    Bantokfomoki got something similar on lifting, shifting and raising Obelisks by rocking them on sloped sand.
    Your method also makes sense.
    The trick is using torque with a lot of vertical or horizontal levers, rocking chair cradles with sand under them and stacks of wood beams to lift them.
    Now all that's needed is to put the stone blocks in place.
    WW: Pivot the big blocks. Roll the smaller blocks on inverted wood cradles.
    Shift the big granite blocks by 'rocking them' turned 90 degrees close to their resting place.
    Tip them over with two or more vertical levers and pulling the rope.
    The fall will give them a little half inch jump into place.
    Gabs can be closed by using a sled with two vertical levers pressing on the base of the block.
    Last block in a row of blocks can be wedged into place by moving the base mover sideways.
    History of Granite got me this tip on how to build the cover stone layer.
    The work area at the pyramid top can be expanded with wood beams sticking out with a plank decking.
    lift the last core blocks and outer cover stones into place and start dismantling the wood decks.
    Smaller stone plugs will later fill the gaps from these beams.
    If you know how to do it. It should be easy to build one.

  • @1206anton
    @1206anton 11 개월 전 +8

    It's not just the lifting, you also have to get the stones exactly in place, for example the stones in the king's chamber. You cannot get a piece of paper between the stones. This not only requires accuracy of placement, but the stones must fit together exactly.

    • @lo-firobotboy7112
      @lo-firobotboy7112 10 개월 전 +1

      That just takes good craftsmanship and a team of skilled masons.

    • @1206anton
      @1206anton 10 개월 전

      @@lo-firobotboy7112
      Still I wonder how they did it.

    • @lo-firobotboy7112
      @lo-firobotboy7112 10 개월 전 +1

      @@1206anton Fair enough. Stone work requires only basic tools. It's more about skill, technique, and patience. With enough strong backs, timbers, and good ropes one can move relatively large objects without too many issues. I imagine the Egyptian builders were very handy with levers, blocks and ramps.

    • @1206anton
      @1206anton 10 개월 전

      @@lo-firobotboy7112
      Why didn`t they continue building these structures?

    • @lo-firobotboy7112
      @lo-firobotboy7112 10 개월 전 +2

      @@1206anton I can only guess, but one imagines that they were very, very, VERY expensive to design, build and maintain. The vast amount of materials, manpower, real estate, and food required to build a pyramid is mind-boggling. Not to mention the time involved. All in the name of one man's legacy.
      It's a lot like what the billionaires of today are doing. Eventually, either the resources are exploited to the point that they are no longer available, or the 'common' folk get fed up and stop supporting/allowing the project to continue..

  • @raymonddols9193
    @raymonddols9193 년 전 +1

    As ingenious as they were in those days, so brilliant is the current explanation. Raymond Dols

  • @davidhadden2787
    @davidhadden2787 5 개월 전

    Best theory I have ever seen!

  • @markjames2909
    @markjames2909 년 전 +1

    This is a very very good video.
    Im glad i stumbled across it, and im looking forward to having a good read through your website tommorow!
    As someone who works with heavy cranes lifting very heavy objects daily (up to 500tons sometimes) , how the pyramids were built has always fascinated me.
    This is one of the best theories I have seen.
    I see many people making claims of "ancient cranes". As someone who knows what it would take for a 70 ton granite block to be lifted with a modern day crane I can tell you the idea of building something using ancient methods from timber and rope that could accomplish this makes absolutely no sense to me at all.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      See how the stones were lifted that dit not fit a TLC in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com Regards b Think how easy it is for one person to balance a loaded 500kg motorcycle.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      'How the stones were lifted that did not fit a TLC' in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com. regards Bernard

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 8 개월 전

      You are stuck thinking in terms of fluid power. With a long rope and enough compound pulleys one man could lift a stone that heavy

    • @markjames2909
      @markjames2909 8 개월 전

      @@roberttassone7676 with a long rope and enough pulleys 1 man could lift a 70ton block... ?

  • @jd70HJ19
    @jd70HJ19 10 개월 전 +2

    Your presentation is remarkably well conceived , and certainly qualifies for one of the many methods used to build certain portions of the Pyamids as it is certain as it is in modern construction not one method or machinery is used exclusively to build and edifice from beginning to finished end. 👏👍 Simple and elegant.

  • @dawg7230
    @dawg7230 10 개월 전 +2

    awesome work, i believe youre really on to something. I love these types of theories bc it just shows the vast toolkit ancient engineers and architechs had to realize the plans put before them. Just goes to show the zahi hawass crowd that just because they were ancients doesnt mean they were stupid or didnt grasp physics.

  • @charharn7011
    @charharn7011 11 개월 전 +2

    When I would move heavy logs by myself I would lift one end high enough using a long lever which has to be anchored working alone. Then need to insert a fulcrum at the center of the log, then by adding weights to the ends I would walk it as you did however with a fulcrum in the center the load was far more manageable. I could lift logs greater then a ton and the height was a matter of constructing the components. So yes other then an adaption it is feasible however the time constraints for placing that many blocks in that short of time is mind boggling even with multiple hoist crews.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Char, het a look at pyramid-building-principles.com you wil enjoy it. Regards Bernard Mullers

  • @keithdmaust1854
    @keithdmaust1854 11 개월 전 +2

    This method IS conceptually viable.
    You figuring this out is highly ingenious.
    BUT - this concept working in the real world at scale would present a lot of problems that were glossed over with the stop animation.
    Still - one of the best ideas I've seen!

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Keith, thx please Google: "National Geographic bernard mullers" or pyramid-building-principles.com Regards Bernard Mullers

    • @keithdmaust1854
      @keithdmaust1854 10 개월 전 +2

      @@Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      After reviewing both links - I stand by my original appraisal.
      For me to be fully convinced, I would need to see much, much more granular detail of process.
      Like I said, great concept, yet not sure it would be viable in real-world construction process.

  • @pierrekotze1030
    @pierrekotze1030 7 개월 전

    I worked it out long ago, that they did not have OHASA, and that a death was collateral damage, a means to an end. Once we have that in mind, a lot more things become possible.

  • @WMConsultingService
    @WMConsultingService 10 개월 전 +1

    i must say this is a great option. and the Triangle Shape of the solution matches the resulting structure. I wonder if we can scale this method with 4m diameter cedars from Lebanon to raise the Balbek stones. Similar to how they say the easter island statues "Walked" to the coast, by rocking side to side taking incremental steps.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Scale up with more not much bigger! Regards Bernard
      Building blocks are big BUT always!! relative smal for easy tilting!! as for Balbek stones. Regards Bernard
      Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story

  • @timgstar3585
    @timgstar3585 10 개월 전 +1

    I can see this working for some parts of the construction but not all

  • @egelders
    @egelders 년 전

    Why do you need niches? For stability of the weoden beams? Why not just lift per layer? And roll the blocks in its place?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      You need the step plus the niche to create a platform big enough for a TLC. The steps are to small for "a device made of smal pieces of wood" (Herodotus). They are made for easy climming the pyramid. Herodotus again wrote "a flight of stairs" and platforms and some call it battlements". Battlements because the stones creating the nice were placed left and right from the platform. Regards Bernard

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Tiers are meant for workers to clime up the pyramid. Platform or battlements (step plus niche) are necessary for working with a TLC. regards Bernard

  • @oddballsok
    @oddballsok 년 전 +2

    0:43 a technical flaw that could be handled though..but not here: to PULL the lever at that high point you need quite a LATERAL force.....this force 'moves'down the TOWER of LOOSE timber beams to reach the SOLID ground..this means only 'friction' holds the tower of timber together... ..but even when they are all PEGGED together (imagine the amount of TIME involved putting it In and OUT each time !!) the WHOLE timber tower is FLEXIBLE and you d be able to pull it (1/2 x 70.000 ton vertical arm 3 meters/ 15 meters high leverage = 7.000 to HORIZONTAL force!!) over !!!!

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Lateral force at 6-7 metres is about 200 kilo for lifting 2.5 ton. Search Google 'box cribbing' for the save range. Stil in use as first aid for propping in dangerous situations. Read Pyramid-Building-Principles.com the section 'How were the stones lifted that did not fit a TLC' . And have a look at the live experiment. Regards Bernard. If you love mathematics read the artikel in ENiM.

  • @1973Grejluder
    @1973Grejluder 10 개월 전

    I saw Wally's video and this idea is not close to what I was thinking but exactly what I had in mind 🤔🤯
    By using this method it will be possible to have several work stations around the pyramids. Let's say that each station is 40 meters wide, this will give 5 stations at each side of the Cheops pyramid.
    From the stoneblock is ready to be lifted and to it's moved it would take 30 min. This means that you would have 20 stones moved per day.
    2,500.000 stones
    2,500,000/ 20 stations = 125.000 lifts.
    125.000/ 20 stones = 6250 days.
    6250/365 = 17 years.
    But this is only for ONE stone to ONE layer.
    As for horizontal movement I've seen videoes sayng that egyptians had cobber. So I was thinking how about a railsystem with 2 layers of cobber and some grease.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Read for the speed of pyramid building: Pyramid-Building-Principles.com
      30 stone blocks per hour in daytime only Grb

  • @chilangotattoos1010
    @chilangotattoos1010 10 개월 전

    Yea now find a very long logs that will resisit tones weight. After that. This technique only works for the inside but what about the las layer of stones ? Whwere does the logs would be soported by? Floating?

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전 +1

      This was meant to be an example of a simple but effective method of lifting weights. Logs have no problem with these weights.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Read "how the stones were lifted that did not fit a Tilt Levering Cage " in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story regards Bernard

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch 10 개월 전

    The Great Pyramid was built by a very advanced civilization at least 20,000 years ago, because they knew that their civilization would disappear due to a predictable but inescapable recurring disaster. All these magnificent structures that we find in Egypt, large but also very small, are a message to us: "Those about to die salute you". That recurring disaster is caused by the ninth planet in our solar system orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. So that planet is only around our sun and its planets for a short time. After crossing the ecliptic plane of the known eight planets at a very high speed, it disappears into the universe for a few thousand years. These crossings cause disasters on our planet with a huge tidal wave, storms, flooding and earthquakes in unprecedented amounts and a bombardment of fiery meteors. Another result is a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about planet 9, the recurring flood cycle and its timeline, the rebirth of civilizations and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". This book answers many of your questions about ancient history. It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: planet 9 roest

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      Sorry. The Earth is only 6,000 years old. Great sci-fi script though....

  • @19freddie58
    @19freddie58 11 개월 전 +2

    That’s cool! Now we should arrange a trial phase in the real world with 2 tons I am sure that will work!!

    • @sakkmatt
      @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

      On the 100th floor, where do you put the legs of the elevator? What kind of wood is the wood pillar that lifts 60 tons made of?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Freddie, Done! see the live test in pyramid-building-principles.com with about 2475 kilo's Regard Bernard Mullers

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전 +1

      ​@@sakkmatt Are you suggesting that buildings don't have elevators that reach the top floor? Charts of wood compression characteristics are easily found if you are concerned about wood being unable to handle heavy weights.

    • @sakkmatt
      @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

      @@Eyes_Open You haven't seen a locomotive yet..You don't know the difference between the heavy and 60 tons.Arcmedes will only invent the snail line for a long time.

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전

      @@sakkmattPlease pick a subject.

  • @notjustforme8857
    @notjustforme8857 9 개월 전

    And how are those blocks lifted and moved to and from that levering cage? Onto the pyramid? With nobody to push?
    Is there any evidence of this technique being used on any pyramid? or any big build? This sounds like a solid idea, but, where is the connection to actual pyramids, or the world in general?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Roller poles on paved trails of parallel tree trunks and pulling plows. see Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the whole story, Regards Bernard
      "The method accepted among Egyptologists of dragging the sledges over sand using rolling poles is nevertheless highly improbable. Rolling posts on sand do not roll but get stuck in it. More likely is that the sledges were pulled along a railway made of poles, not on a single track, but more likely a route paved with parallel poles".

  • @joan6044
    @joan6044 10 개월 전

    Another good idea, but I still think the “poured concrete” (geopolymer) is the most reasonable and feasible method of construction.

  • @19freddie58
    @19freddie58 10 개월 전 +2

    After reading all the linked to stuff I am convinced 100% that is the way they did it! Thanks Bernard, you are a genius!! I hope they will recognise you and your ideas!

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Freddie, Have a look at pyramid-building-principles.com thx Regards Bernard Mullers

    • @user-yq1rc6or9x
      @user-yq1rc6or9x 10 개월 전

      Dude... It would have taken a hundred thousand years to get anywhere with this method.

    • @hankmeyer1834
      @hankmeyer1834 10 개월 전

      ole Freddie is more interested in kissing your behind than actually thinking about what engineering skills would have been required to build the GP....

    • @19freddie58
      @19freddie58 10 개월 전

      @@hankmeyer1834 what makes you think that?

    • @19freddie58
      @19freddie58 10 개월 전

      @@hankmeyer1834 what is your theory? how was it done?

  • @jaimevazquez9044
    @jaimevazquez9044 9 개월 전

    You are totally right. Probably this is one of the methods Egyptian uses for building the pyramids. Spaniards not long ago manage to build fortress around the cities of Cartagena and San Juan and many of the stone block of this fortresses and castle weight several tones and we don't know what cane of method they use. They manage to lift some really heavy bells to the top of the church towers and some of these towers are like ten floor building in heigh. Saying all that I still believe that Aliens are behind all human history. Most of the human knowledge and technological advance. They don't do it the job, but they teach you how to do it.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Another possible teaching with pyramid-building-principles.com and 'how the stones were lifted that did not fit a Tilt levering Cage'. regards Bernard

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      Yeah aliens....👽👽👽

  • @rodneypate1693
    @rodneypate1693 10 개월 전

    Brilliant. It makes sense. Blessings ♾☯️

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전 +1

      Thx read more in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. Regards Bernard

  • @JaapGrootveld
    @JaapGrootveld 10 개월 전

    Het zou zomaar kunnen, dat de piramide bouwers beschikte over een tijdmachine en op hun zoektocht naar een geschikte bouw methode op dit youtube filmpje gestuit zijn.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Haha. Tijdmachine op batterijen? Waren zelf handig en technisch genoeg.
      Kopie uit scheepvaart twee tweepoot masten aan elkaar en vervolgens kielen en stutten grb klick: Pyramid-Building-Principles.com

  • @theRhinsRanger
    @theRhinsRanger 10 개월 전 +1

    You can move the world if you have a big enough lever

  • @knine1652
    @knine1652 9 개월 전

    Don't believe there would be near enough time to continually built and dismantle the stacked wood, considering a search revealed "The Great Pyramid of Giza contains 2.3 million individual blocks of stone, meaning one block would have to be laid every five minutes of every hour, 24 hours a day, for the entire 20 years."

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      On the pyramid under construction, a stair was built at the base about every 20 meters. That's about 10 per side or 40 in total. 360 Stones had to be transported up in 12 hours during the day. That is 30 blocks per hour to be delivered with about 30 Tilt Levering Cages for which even 40 stairs on every platform a TLC were available at the start. This means that the workmen with their Tilt Levering Cages could take more than an hour for the last platform step to reach that number. A rough estimate of the working time per platform step with 5 to 6 full cycles of tilting and the horizontal transport of the TLC to the next platform would have taken a well-trained team no more than half an hour! See Pyramid-Building-Principles.com Regards Bernard

  • @lyntonkwame818
    @lyntonkwame818 년 전

    Dear sir, have you any idea how heavy the granite stones are above the Kings chamber? No way this could be the way they have manouvered the stones into place!! The only viable way is vibration!!

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전 +1

      You need a lot of energie not vibrations. See Pyramid-Building-Principles.com and 'How the stones were lifted that did not fit the TLC'.

    • @jospinvanraat8730
      @jospinvanraat8730 년 전

      @@Mullers-tiltleveringcageMee eens. I agree there.

    • @lyntonkwame818
      @lyntonkwame818 년 전

      Have you ever checked whats the reason they build the pyramids? And why there are no pharao's buried in the pyramids?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      @@lyntonkwame818 Symbol of early Egyptian state and a grave monument like most regards b

    • @PXCharon
      @PXCharon 10 개월 전

      "Vibration"
      Yeah bro, keep up the Woo.

  • @johnjohnson9658
    @johnjohnson9658 10 개월 전

    Brilliant

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Thx, Copie from shipbuilding and repair. See whole story on: Pyramid-Building-Principles.com Regards Bernard

  • @arthurl.330
    @arthurl.330 년 전 +1

    Impressive Bernard!

  • @angelinah75
    @angelinah75 년 전

    How did they cut the stone?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Splitting, endless hammering and chiseling I suppoos. regards Bernard

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Endless hammering. Remember 99% is lime stone not as hard as granite. regards Bernard

    • @klm20079
      @klm20079 년 전

      @@Mullers-tiltleveringcage bullshit lime stone was uses too make the outside of the pyramids that was white... the graniet is one of the strongest materials... hammering splitten joke ahahhah. there are machine cravings, perfect cylinder cuts... you just think the builders where primates hahahah.
      search Graham Hancock he is the person making you really question those fake history lessons about bronze tools cutting graniet at the speed the pyramids where build

    • @bigpetee4572
      @bigpetee4572 10 개월 전

      laser cut....?

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 9 개월 전

      @@bigpetee4572 No

  • @spatrk6634
    @spatrk6634 년 전 +7

    there are so many ways they could've have been built without involving aliens, flaming laser swords and telekinesis

  • @lowesteastside
    @lowesteastside 10 개월 전

    That was cool

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear C, thx the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @petergroedvelt4236

    I still think it must have been some kind of concrete and the blocks where just filled. like this: krplus.net/bidio/ntOeiY-ohHzUanY this shown method above is too time consuming, better than previous models but still too slow. And this method is somewhat the same as an older method. krplus.net/bidio/dZmojGenhG3aaZQ

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Sedimentaire organic chalk, deep under the oceaan by pressure and heat converted in lime stone, no concrete. 20-30 Giant staircases consisting of platforms (or some call it battlements: Herodotus) of steps and niches on all sites of the pyramid. Regards Bernard

  • @alexstukov6817
    @alexstukov6817 10 개월 전

    good idea

  • @hankmeyer1834
    @hankmeyer1834 11 개월 전

    so, where did all of that hardwood come from, since about the only wood available was cedar, which is soft. Next, how does this supposed technique account for the precise fitting of 2.5 millions blocks? Or the grantite plugs, which are at an angle? Or the stones above the king's chamber? and how did the topmost blocks get 'lifted' and put into such a narrow space? how did the base of the great pyramid get sooooooo level? sounds like more malarky. oh, and why are there NO hieroglyphs portraying the construction of the most precise building around in 2500 BC? Did someone forget?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Please reed pyramid-building-principles.com : "How the stone were lifted that dit not fit a TLC". Look at the hiëroglief of a pyramid and compare this with a TLC. You wil be surprised regard Bernard Mullers

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전

      Precise fitting? The majority of the mass of blocks in the Great Pyramid are rough cut limestone of varying sizes with a backfill of rubble and mortar.

  • @therednask
    @therednask 10 개월 전

    Wszystko ładnie wygląda na obrazku , 30 lat walczyłem ze skałami , i jeśli chodzi o 200kg to idzie sobie z tym radzić ale jak zaczynają się 2tony to jest problem do tego stopnia że nie ma gdzie ustawić ludzi a co dopiero przemieszczać bloki

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Lees Pyramid-Building-Principles.com voor het hele verhaal grb

    • @therednask
      @therednask 9 개월 전

      ​@@Mullers-tiltleveringcage to już widziałem , wszystko tam jest opisane to brednie. Bez żadnego potwierdzenia. Mówiłem że pracowałem w kamieniu 30lat. To co proponuje człowiek układający 2 kamienie to jest chore psychicznie , patrząc na skalę 2.300.000 bloków tych małych a co dopiero większych. Mając maszyny które tną , wiercą i rozwalają kamienie to jest nie do pomyślenia robiąc to ręcznie. osobiście ładowałem ciągarkami róże typy skał ciężarów ale wymagające staja się bloki powyżej 10ton gdyż wszystkie urządzenia do przesuwania i podnoszenia takiego ciężaru nie jest w stanie człowiek udźwignąć i przemieścić by przeciągnąć ciężar dalej o 50metrów. Tak może teoretyzować człowiek który nie dźwignął więcej niż 10 kilo i na tym bazuje bo bało jest ludzi naprawdę pracujących na urządzeniach i masach powyżej 10 ton. Dlatego ta popularność wynikająca z niewiedzy ludzi. Współczuje reklamowania tego gniota .

  • @totttrax
    @totttrax 10 개월 전

    Interesting,,, seems very time consuming in real practice definitely wouldn't fit the historical timelines but still an interesting theory

  • @BeaulieuTodd
    @BeaulieuTodd 9 개월 전 +1

    Still doesn’t explain how massive blocks would be slid around on a level.

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 9 개월 전 +1

      Lift slightly and push

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      Exactly- they needed the pinpoint x,y,z accuracy only a crane could provide. Easy when you know how.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  7 개월 전

      Using the Tilt Levering Cage! First the TLC is pulled form its box cribs on the stone layer and than pulled agian on rollerpoles to the definitive place for the building block. See pyramid-building-principles.com Regards Bernard Mullers

  • @robertfraser9551
    @robertfraser9551 11 개월 전

    Simple neat safe quick efficient mobile - ticks all the boxes !!!

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Robert, pyramid-building-principles.com for the compleet story. Regards Bernard Mullers

  • @MightyOff1ine
    @MightyOff1ine 11 개월 전 +1

    3000 years later they still building

  • @PaulaBean
    @PaulaBean 9 개월 전

    Dit is de eerste methodiek die ik tegenkom die plausibel lijkt. Lekker simpel ook, doorstaat met gemak Ockham's Scheermes test.
    Trouwens, als ik naar de halfbewerkte dekstenen van de Pyramide van Menkaure kijk, vermoed ik dat de dekstenen ook gelijk geplaatst werden, en niet op het laatst van boven naar beneden. Wat denk jij? Zie krplus.net/bidio/ZLSIYmali2Tbq5g

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  8 개월 전

      Thx, Zeker wel gelijk op van boven naar beneden met sluiting van steeds hoogste platformen van de kantellift trappen. Zie hoe de dekstenen werden aangebracht in pyramid-building-principles.com Grb

  • @tx2184
    @tx2184 10 개월 전

    tak, tylko że taki 2,5 t głaz wywierał ogromną siłę na te wysokie nogi i ten punkt podparcia w narożnikach musiałby być nie z drewna ale ze stali

  • @gnswamy1524
    @gnswamy1524 11 개월 전

    I am professionnel motion machine inventor but no helping no helping please help me

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Gn, thx, Again the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @GlobalTriathlonNetwork
    @GlobalTriathlonNetwork 10 개월 전

    This does not account for getting the casing stones up. It has been proven that they were installed from the ground up.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Installed top down on the pyramid. If not the cladding would collapse read Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. regards Bernard

  • @roberttassone7676
    @roberttassone7676 년 전 +2

    Bravo! Well done! This theory is time consuming when considering the number of blocks per day that needed to be placed. Ancient cranes were most likely used employing pulleys and counterweights

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전 +1

      What is the reach of a crane and how many can stand on the edge? How were these moved higher and higher? You bet it was easy with a TLC. Hundreds of TLC's on the 4 sides of the pyramid see Piramid-Building-Principles.com

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 년 전 +2

      @@Mullers-tiltleveringcage Bernard, I think your theory is brilliant! And is another example of what could be accomplished with a scaled up mechanical advantage. The issue is mobility after the stone has been lifted to it's required level then into it's final position.(x,y,z axis) Multiple cranes would have been used lifting stones from level to level as they built upward. My biggest issue is with those who believe that the Egyptians were master builders, engineers , astronomers and artists who had a complex written language but yet somehow, had NO mastery of the wheel nor pulleys while at the same time, acknowledging their use of logs as rollers! A roller is nothing more than an elongated wheel- madness.

    • @markjames2909
      @markjames2909 년 전 +2

      Hello. I am a lifting surveyor and crane manager. The theory of ancient cranes doesnt sit well with me given the weight of some of the blocks in the pyramids and the height at which these were lifted.
      This may not be exact but I know from a rough estimate the granite blocks around the Kings chamber are around 70 tons at a height of 300 feet.
      To put it into perspective to lift a load of 40 tons to a radius of about 20 meters you need a crane with a lifting capacity of 300 tons and counterweight of around 130 tons, this is taking into account the giant steel stability legs of modern day cranes and the giant steel boom on modern day cranes.
      To think that Egyptians could build a crane from timber and rope with enough strength and ballast to pull 70 tons into the air just doesn't make sense to me.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      Many giant stairs may be 20-25 on 4 sites of the pyramid explains the average placement of building blocks every 4 minutes Regards Bernard

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 11 개월 전

      ​​​​@@markjames2909 maybe the Egyptians were just smarter than we give them credit for. Trees were also much bigger back then. Cedars of Lebanon and American Sequoias bear that out. Ropes are easily scaled and with the use of compound pulleys, they only need to carry a fraction of the total load.lifting ability is only one part of this equation. X,Y,Z axis control is the other.

  • @rudiriemens9012
    @rudiriemens9012 년 전 +2

    Prachtige innovatie, zeer vernuftig bedacht!

  • @tsquared4831
    @tsquared4831 11 개월 전

    As the old saying goes.. close but no cigar

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear T, thx, the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @davidcorbett341
    @davidcorbett341 10 개월 전

    It's an interesting theory but you would need a hell of alot of wood to build this way

  • @cheboy
    @cheboy 년 전

    aardig. maar dan nu de graniete blokken van de kamers.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      See Pyramid-Building-Principles.com and 'How the stones were lifted that did not fit the TLC'.
      Regards Bernard

    • @cheboy
      @cheboy 년 전

      heb gekeken. voor de twee en halfe ton stenen zal deze nieuwe theory wel werken, denk ik zo. Maar zal zeer zeker niet werken voor de 70 ton zware blokken. think about it.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      @@cheboy Lees Pyramid-Building-Principles.com: hoe de stenen werden geligt die niet in een TLC passen. Zeker interessant als je ook motorrijder bent grb

    • @cheboy
      @cheboy 년 전

      i dit. voor de twee en halfe ton stenen zal deze nieuwe theory wel werken, denk ik zo. Maar zal zeer zeker niet werken voor de 70 ton zware blokken. think about it.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전

      @@cheboy Beste Boy, Omdat de zeer grote stenen niet in een kantelliftkooi pasten waren grotere kantelliftkooi constructies nodig. Het kan ook zijn dat de steen onderdeel werd van een meervoudige hefboomconstructie boven de steen. De steen werd dan als onderdeel de basis van het geheel van hefboomconstructie daarboven. Natuurlijk waren er aanzienlijk meer mensen nodig om de trekkracht voor het kantelen te leveren. Maar door het aangrijpingspunt, de top van de hefboom, te verhogen en de kantellijnen dichter bij elkaar te brengen moet het mogelijk zijn geweest ook de zwaarste granieten stenen kantelend te liften.
      De stenen voor de kamers en de “drukontlastende plafonds” werden mogelijk steeds per steenlaag op de piramide in aanbouw gelift. Daarbij werden de stenen voorzien van een geconstrueerde hefboom erboven en werden deze op hun zijkant voor een gunstiger kantelmoment, kantelend gelift. Indien op hoogte werden deze op de volgende steenlaag getrokken. Dat betekende liften en heen en weer verplaatsen, op bijna de zelfde locatie. Mogelijk stonden de stenen in lijn opgesteld en werden deze na elkaar gelift om vervolgens alleen over hun lengte verplaatst te worden op een volgende steenlaag. Bij dit heen en weer verplaatsen zullen zeker rolpalen zijn gebruikt
      Op de bouw plaats en wat hoger met de grootste stenen bedroeg de lift 1.2 meter, hoger kon ongeveer dezelfde veilige lift aangehouden worden door 2 steenlagen te passeren. Op de steenlagen onderin de piramide was er meer dan voldoende ruimte om op deze wijze te werken. De te overbruggen hoogte met de grootste stenen bedroeg van 25 tot 60 meter voor de laatste plafondsteen. grb

  • @floydriebe4755
    @floydriebe4755 10 개월 전

    interesting concept.....hmmm

  • @gnswamy1524
    @gnswamy1524 11 개월 전

    Rail good royal good I am proud of

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Gn, thx, the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @runtime1976
    @runtime1976 10 개월 전

    You did not figure it out, look at the top the whole pyramid was polished!

  • @hichmaz1241
    @hichmaz1241 년 전

    the best theory that convinced me the most

    • @cfc7188
      @cfc7188 11 개월 전

      Pues has visto pocas.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Zich, thx, the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @oddballsok
    @oddballsok 년 전

    i have a more brilliant idea..just extrapolate this lever arm contraption: and make a HUGE WHEEL 2 times the arm size of the lver...the lever beams are so much the SPOKE of the giant wheel...and the stone block of 70 tons is on a ROLLING platform inside the wheel RIM....tadaaaaah

  • @sakkmatt
    @sakkmatt 11 개월 전 +1

    You lift a stone to 50 cm high. And other? There is 60 tons stone too! Your hoist can't stand it. If you want to use this lift, inserting in and unloading, slipping into place? Will not succeed.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Reed "how the stones were lifted that dit not fit in a TLC" at pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @corneilcorneil
    @corneilcorneil 11 개월 전

    Your Dutch accent is clear 😂😂

  • @cfc7188
    @cfc7188 11 개월 전

    Ahora, esto llévalo a la realidad. Imposible.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Kemet, My answer see pyramid-building-principles.com the live test. Regards Bernard Mullers

    • @cfc7188
      @cfc7188 10 개월 전

      @@Mullers-tiltleveringcage Gracias por tu respuesta, pero ya había visto el video y, esto que explica, situados en esa época y, como ya dije, aplicado a bloques de 20 toneladas o más peso, es irrealizable, a la que intentes subir uno, se te desmonta el artilugio, no tiene sentido.

  • @sakkmatt
    @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

    Do not put any wood under 60 tons! Please use red arrows to represent the resulting forces as we learned!

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전 +1

      I do not understand your warning about 60 tons.

    • @sakkmatt
      @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

      @@Eyes_Open Design how you take a locomotive to the 120th floor. You can only use wooden crane.

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전 +1

      @@sakkmatt Why do you ask about a locomotive? Your topic was 60 tons. Why is 60 tons important to wood?

    • @sakkmatt
      @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

      @@Eyes_Open The pyramid also has some 60 tons stone. The locomotive replaces the stone. If you can't put it high, there will be no king chamber.

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전 +1

      @@sakkmatt Yes. A few stones up to 70 tons. Half way up the height of the pyramid? Ramps are awesome.

  • @pieinthesky4106
    @pieinthesky4106 10 개월 전

    This is interesting, but time consuming. The number of bricks in the length of time to built just doesn't work.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Read Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story the possible answer is given there. regards Bernard

  • @timmckee2813
    @timmckee2813 10 개월 전

    ...ha...great...can that be done every five minutes for twenty years...ha...can't even cut the blocks and transport them every five minutes...ha...love...

  • @refulgent_fanta
    @refulgent_fanta 10 개월 전 +1

    Are you suggesting ancient builders were actually smart and resourceful, and not the idiots people today think they were?
    I think people today don’t realize just how much you can achieve with simple tools and a bit of elementary physics.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      They were brilliant at the time !
      Read it in Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. Regards Bernard

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 8 개월 전

      Exactly! Amazing what can be done with a scaled up mechanical advantage. The problem here is you need a historian, an archeologist, an engineer and a builder to come to a reasonable solution. No one person can fill all of those shoes at the same time so here we are ...

  • @davidstarreveld8598

    Geniaal, lekker gewerkt.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear David, thx het complete verhaal: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @chorleycake7942
    @chorleycake7942 11 개월 전

    It’s definitely aliens

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Chorley, The compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @vikfrankefilms
    @vikfrankefilms 년 전 +1

    Damn, is this real? Breakthrough! 'The simplest solution tends to be the right one'....!

    • @klm20079
      @klm20079 년 전

      nope ;) this looks like noob technics... the real builders of the pyramids had lost technology before the float. krplus.net/bidio/nqWjan2TmaWopIo&ab_channel=PowerfulJRE
      this podcast with Graham Hancock give really more questions about how they build it

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      You're right hugb

  • @ebenezerwoodworking3616
    @ebenezerwoodworking3616 11 개월 전

    Good solution. Man has always been ingenious.

    • @sakkmatt
      @sakkmatt 10 개월 전

      On the 100th floor, where do you put the legs of the elevator? What kind of wood is the wood pillar that lifts 60 tons made of?

    • @charliejones5430
      @charliejones5430 10 개월 전

      I don’t know. This maybe could work but I don’t know that it was done this way. Lots of people have ideas. This one it at the top in my opinion.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Ebenezer, thx the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @eddiea2457
    @eddiea2457 11 개월 전

    Yet, the pyramid is far from being solid. Sooooo, try again......😅

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Eddie, The compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @rbwoodwork1890
    @rbwoodwork1890 11 개월 전

    They’ve done some core drilling on some of the stone block’s which have led to a very different conclusion. They found air bubbles, bugs and human hair. From these discoveries they figure the lime stone was ground into a powder then mixed with a epoxy like substance and poured in place. Haven’t seen anything to back this up but does add to the possibility.

    • @sheltonpinson2904
      @sheltonpinson2904 10 개월 전

      Any videos on this?

    • @rbwoodwork1890
      @rbwoodwork1890 10 개월 전

      @@sheltonpinson2904 here is some other stuff: krplus.net/bidio/ndt7pYdkiJ6pgZg

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open 10 개월 전

      The Geopolymer Institute has been pushing that idea for years. Peer review does not support it.

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      Anyone who thinks the blocks are cement have never been to the pyramids. Period.

  • @hankmeyer1834
    @hankmeyer1834 10 개월 전

    and just how was the granite bedrock base leveled with such precision? perhaps using a box of toothpicks? 13 plus acres, ruler flat too within a half inch....all carved out of hard rock with soft copper tools and some chanting? A giant fingernail file hoisted and pulled with ropes?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Dear Hank, See Petrie's Chart and see how irregulier the stones were also read Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. regards Bernard

  • @hankmeyer1834
    @hankmeyer1834 9 개월 전

    still dodging key quesrions??? how did the 'Egyptians' manage to hack out solid grantite for the base with remarkable precision using soft copper tools??????

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Endless hammering with a harder igneous rock than the granite of Aswan grb

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      How about an 80 yo man in a suit coat cutting a block of granite by himself? 😮
      krplus.net/bidio/ppGGpZmkfo-5fpw

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      The ancients were not primitive or dumb. In fact they were are lot smarter than we are.

    • @firstnamelastname-oy7es
      @firstnamelastname-oy7es 9 개월 전

      Rock cuts rock.

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 9 개월 전 +1

      @@roberttassone7676 That's an awesome video. Although he was using steel pegs which probably didn't exist in Egypt at the time. But the technique could certainly work.

  • @carl250x9
    @carl250x9 11 개월 전

    I don’t think so

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Carl, The compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com regards Bernard Mullers

  • @ToinJansen
    @ToinJansen 년 전

    Meest waarschijnlijke verklaring ooit.

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  년 전 +1

      Beste Toen, Zie Pyramid-Building-Principles.com
      Herodotus had wederom (hier 'bijna') gelijk. grb

  • @TheRotnflesh
    @TheRotnflesh 10 개월 전 +1

    Though interesting this is probably not how they did it.
    The original pyramids (Cheops, Menkaure, Khafre, Red, Meidum) are too sophiticated for the well-known Egyptian civilization. It isn't just about the cuts and placement for the blocks (something which we still have no proper 'how to' to show done), it's also how well-fitting, how precise the dimensions, and how all of them are oriented to the cardinal directions.
    These are not simple achievements. These are amazing, even to our modern society. There is no evidence that the ancient Egyptians (3000-2000 B.C.) had the kind of magnetic tech required to orient those massive buildings within a fraction of a degree of true north. Keep in mind that they were oriented as they were set, not afterwards (that would be hilarious!), so they mathematically designed the entire plateau before construction.
    We don't do that. No primitive culture/civilization/people have ever exhibited such precise mathematics or construction techniques. Nowhere in the history of Egypt did they produce replicate technologies or construction techniques. After the "old Dynasties and pre-dynastic Egyptians" they used sun-dried fire-baked bricks, sandstone, and limestone. They did not use basalt or granite in recorded history.
    The Djoser vases/bowls (40,000 of them) are being analyzed mathematically and geometrically, and the ones completed show INSANE precision. Circumferential thickness differences down to 1/75,000th of a MM, sacred geometric symmetries; The flower of life is represented in the designs over and over; something we don't attribute to the Dynastic Egyptians.
    Today we are incredibly clever and use a amazingly large array of tools and machines to accomplish construction and architectural tasks. Specialists today examining these structures have NO IDEA how they were built. The stones in the Cheops (for example) are not placed side-by-side in a running line around the pyramid; each successive layer is proportionately smaller from the base to the crown. The mathematics required for that precision have never been attributed to the Ancient Egyptians.
    Let's not forget that cutting basalt and granite WITH PRECISION is not the same as scratching at it with copper implments; the end-result of the thousands of vases/bowls, statues, boxes, and the pyramids themselves is INCREDIBLE precision, angles, curves, surfaces. The Egyptians recorded anything and everything important in their chronicles but do not include the construction of the Cheops trio nor the amazing artifacts. No data; like they were already there. The casing stones of the Cheops are also 'protuberance polygonal masonry', also found in Peru, Italy, Malta, and other places. And including Ramses' marked granite/basalt monuments/statues is ridiculous: His era could not work any of these stones and Ramses' cartouche's on such artifacts is graffiti.
    All in all, there are way too many holes in the story of "Dynastic Egypt constructing the original Pyramids".

  • @WolfHeathen
    @WolfHeathen 9 개월 전

    I can see how this could've potentially been used on the smaller pyramids. It's simple enough. However, when it comes to the three greater pyramids in Giza, they figured out how they were built not too long ago.
    After discovering x-ray scans of the pyramids, they found the diagonal ramps hidden inside the building. After the visual on-site inspection it was confirmed that these ramps still exist. The ramps run diagonally parallel to the outside walls between platforms built into the pyramid at set points where the pyramid sides meet. These platforms can be seen from the outside even today.
    The platforms had fixed cranes which lifted and turned the stone blocks while workers lifted and turned the sleds so they could be pulled up the next ramp to an even higher platform. They also figured out that the ramp in the Grand Gallery was used for the same purpose with wooden scaffolding and wooden beams set into the inserts in the stone along the walls so that the sled wouldn't slide all the way down to the bottom in case the ropes snapped.

  • @ThaiStore
    @ThaiStore 년 전 +1

    Kerel Leer eerst eens knap Engels spreken voordat je dit soort video's publiceert...Haha

    • @klm20079
      @klm20079 년 전 +2

      plus geen meer fake history verspreiden als logica of denkt het te weten...

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      @@klm20079 Lees Pyramid-Building-Principles.com voor het hele 'fake' verhaal inclusief de opmerkingen van Herodotus 500 v.C. en de hiëroglief. grb

  • @hankmeyer1834
    @hankmeyer1834 10 개월 전

    yes, dipshyte...precise fitting....I have stood on the GP....it has been built with precision, not by using phony levers constructed with non-existent wood....so how did those workers manage to put together the grand gallery using your pipe dream tool? gosh...where could those pie in the sky cranes stand while tons of granite was somehow laid into all sorts of odd positions? And, once again, if such machinery was really used, why are there NO hieroglyphics in the entire FN country that portray these devices? Why are there NO hierglyphics in the entire country of Egypt that even mentions the Great Pyramid? Did some scribe misplace the memo?

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Dear Hank, There are many hiërogliefs of 'pyramids' but they don't look it at all, but they do look exact like a Tilt Levering Cage. Historical mistake read Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. regards Bernard

  • @vincentlussier8264
    @vincentlussier8264 11 개월 전

    No way! No easier than other theories.Over two mollion stones? Four hundred and eighty feet high?

  • @doklovelove3023
    @doklovelove3023 11 개월 전

    ridiculous ever

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  10 개월 전

      Dear Dok, thx, more ridiculous? see the compleet story at: pyramid-building-principles.com and be convinced. regards Bernard Mullers

  • @davidhubach5528
    @davidhubach5528 10 개월 전

    350 stones a day 365 days a year for 20 years , aliens built them

    • @PXCharon
      @PXCharon 10 개월 전

      What a racist idea. "Them dark people were too stupid to figure this out, musta' been them there aliens what probed me in my trailer!"

    • @Mullers-tiltleveringcage
      @Mullers-tiltleveringcage  9 개월 전

      Pyramid-Building-Principles.com for the complete story. regards Bernard

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 9 개월 전

      No aliens did not. If aliens existed and actually visited, why would they bother building something out of stone?

    • @roberttassone7676
      @roberttassone7676 9 개월 전

      Aliens as a solution demonstrates a weak mind.

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 9 개월 전

      @@roberttassone7676 And yet, see what's going on in the USA Congress right now? And people believe it for some reason. Well, they used to believe in witchcraft too.