NickT wrote:Ciro are you ok? Interesting post, a little off topic, but very interesting.
Well, first, I was trying to comment on Conceptual's phrase:
Conceptual wrote:Reminds me an aweful lot of the work done by Edward Leedskalnin. He claimed to have the secret of how the blocks of the pyramids were put in place, and it all relied on harmonics and vibration.
I assume you worry about me because you think that the "roller concept" is my original idea and I'm a nut that claims to have cracked the secret to build the pyramids. I'd wish...
However, thanks anyway for your concern, you're a friend. I would do the same if I thought you put forward such preposterous claims without any backing, research or archeology training.
It's the idea of Dr. R. H. G. Parry, published in the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering journal. Here is the link:
Rolling Stones
Mr. Parry's conclusion:
If µ = 0.25, the force required to roll a cylinder up a slope is 1 of 4 is only one-quarter that required to slide a block of the same weight. It is of interest to note in Figure 1 that in contrast to the sled the frictional force on the rolling cylinder acts up the slope and assists in raising it.
Here you have the full scale tests carried by Dr. Parry:
Rolling 2.5 tonne block up ramp with slope of 1 in 4.
Now, that
it's a theory, but I think is more solid than the one of using sound waves to make the stones to float, the alternative proposed by Conceptual, don't you agree?

I really think the guy hit the nail in the head.
Besides, the article is old (1997), I don't know why is not more popular, but, hey, this is a try.
I wonder how old is this technology: it
could have been used in other megalithic constructions, some of them incomprehensible to modern engineers:
After all, humankind developed stone technology for, I don't know 1 million years, since the Stone Age. Most of the methods are lost, perhaps forever.
So, courtesy of F1Technical, next time somebody claims the pyramids were built by aliens, some kind of magic or the work of hundred of thousands of persons, you have a reasonable, perfectly logical engineering explanation.
I would like to mention that it's a feasible alternative in the third world (or anywhere) to the methodical use of hydraulic machinery, the only alternative we, engineers, offer today.
Allright, apologies for going OOT again. Last post on the issue, I'll now look for sound waves in exhausts and I'll be back, I swear. We have posted a lot about that here.