Ancient Technology Podcast - Lost Advanced Technologies in Ancient Egypt | Chris King - Part 3

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This is the third episode of a four-part series featuring Chris King on the Ancient Technology Podcast, the visionary behind Chris King Precision Components, with over 50 years of expertise in super high-precision manufacturing and machining across aerospace, medical, and biking industries. In this episode, we are analyzing the smoking gun evidence of drum roll grinder and circular saw marks, as well as granite scoop marks found throughout Egypt.

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SHOW NOTES:
00:00:00-Introduction
00:01:37-Pyramid casing stones
00:14:55-Masonry in Peru
00:16:32-Grinder toolmarks in Egypt
00:29:39-Evidence of circular saw
00:37:20-Reaction to debunkers
00:41:37-Potential abrasives
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WOW this was very interesting, really clever ideas and insight. Think you Sir

Craft-ohuv
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What an engrossing conversation. Thanks for putting in the time, gents. Really enlightening to see you put your knowledge to work, matching cut marks to theorised blades. On to the next video!

matthewillsley
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39:23 The SAM target cut looks a lot more consistent that the "AHT Ancient cut. You can not deny that.

swintondavid
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I'm really interested in what was briefly mentioned about 28 minutes in. About how they affixed the grinding material to the tools. btw, the videos are great. I really appreciate the closeups and angles. It satisfies the geologist in me. [edited to add.] ahh I see that later it was discussed more. Looking forward to part 4!

debaser
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The stone looks like an apprentice and a skilled man the skilled man was showing the last pass/cut on how to do it right.

keithscott
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yo, changing the camera angle for the sneeze was fire

guycomments
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The box seen at the very end should've been the main focal point. It proves the cutting process is not slow and laborious or they would have corrected the error instead of allowing the blade to continue at an angle until binding and breaking-off the lid.

burtpanzer
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I'm glad I found your channel. Just subscribed.

antoniokasljevic
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would love to hear this man's input on the unfinished obelisk "scoop marks", specifically the indication that an articulated arm was used in conjunction with some type of device that scooped the stone. please see the timestamp starting at 50m in the video titled "The 1100 ton Unfinished Obelisk - Carved with Pounding Stones? An UnchartedX Investigation!".

AustinKoleCarlisle
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Definitely some evidence of rotary tool/machine use. But how would they of powered it?

Jon
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This is the coolest shit I've ever seen in my life. Thank you!

TC-Loom
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At around the 30.00 I think the brum was a granite slab, narrow at base and 3 or 4 feet in hight to give it waight, with wood blocks ether side for stability use sand & water a rope at one end and simply pulled/dragged by say 50 to 100 men back and forth.

Craft-ohuv
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You guys are masters of beating a topic to death via a discussion.

ChrisMaveric
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Again, in my own field of cabinet making, during the Georgian period you'd have had apprentices who would spend days smoothing off a table top using cabinet scrapers and abrasives to get a perfect surface. Today you can run it through a speed sander in a matter of seconds to get the same result.. If you didn't know that piece of history you could very easily look at a perfect Georgian dining table today, use all sorts of instruments on it and conclude they must have had unknown high technology to have produced such perfect results. The point is human beings have remarkable abilities to solve problems, the ancients were no different.. We can't imagine what kind of tech will be available in 4000 years time so we can't think in terms of the solutions they might come up with and the tools they'll have available. To solve these mysteries we have to put ourselves in the shoes of the ancients with the tools they had available..

chrismalcomson
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Could high-pressure water or air power a grinder to create these abrasions. Likewise a circular saw blade for cuts?

edwinmoreton
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Hierapolis saw. Arsenical copper saw. Aluminum oxide abrasive compound slurry.

ThomasRonnberg
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hahaha...I was going to comment until I heard; 42:20 .. nice material keep it up!!

echoarcade_nj
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The Land of Chem channel explains everything about pyramids

toresmores
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It looks to me like they laid the casing stones rough and then used pounding stones for the finishing. When you consider it took about 20 years to build on of these pyramids they must have had teams working full time just doing one job. I'd imagine they'd get very good at it and it would surprise us how quickly they could do it.
In my own field of cabinet making I met an old school dovetailer who could make 8 drawers a day to perfection using hand tools. Now you can use a machine with no skills and produce hundreds. Technology on the whole doesn't so much allow you to do what couldn't have been done before, it just makes it more efficient..
If you got a job working for the pharoah the normal rules of commerce don't apply, just like a government job today. If it takes you 10 years to carve out an obelisk using insanely crude methods, so be it. In some ways the harder it is to produce something, the more value you place on it. This methodology is completely in keeping with the work we see..

chrismalcomson
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Hello ! I'm new to your channel and I'm a house builder here in Quebec near Montreal. I don't understand your theory about the
circular saw section where you see straight lines, a circular saw doesn't do straight lines but circular ? I'm missing something here . Thanks for your very interesting channel ! I'm about to press that dangerous sub button ! hihi ! You think it might have been done with ancient lazer technology ?

lousekoya