Ancient Technology Podcast - Lost Advanced Technologies in Ancient Egypt | Chris King - Part 4

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This is the last episode of a four-part series featuring Chris King on the Ancient Technology Podcast. Chris King is the visionary behind Chris King Precision Components, with over 50 years of expertise in high-precision manufacturing and machining across the aerospace, medical, and biking industries. In this episode, we are analyzing 5,000-year-old hard stone vases that have unbelievable micron-level precision, which cannot be explained by the mainstream narrative.

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SHOW NOTES:
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:01:37 - Mystery of the vases
00:04:13 - Turning marks on vases
00:13:43 - Recreation possibilities
00:35:23 - Scanning museum pieces
00:43:28 - Outro
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Im camped in the belief that the egyptians found the pyramids already built (by a previous cycle of human advancement) and then lived there thousands of years working stone trying to mimic the work they found.

RomoRooster
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Absolutely the best demonstration of ancient technology I have ever seen. Tremendous work you have done here. You are making world shattering history yourselves by sharing the findings of your work. Bravo gentleman, bravo!

Mr_Curious
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Great assessments, excellent questions.
Had his headsets and bottom brackets for decades on every bike i've owned.
So nice to see him talking machining and manufacturing.

LivingSpiritDesign
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This is the best assessment of how these things could have been manufactured I've seen. Chris makes some great points. Interesting to hear about some of the features on top of the lug handles showing signs of hand work, that is the first I've heard of this. What a truly fascinating topic, no matter what the method of manufacture, I think we can all agree that these really are exquisitely crafted objects

eeyzas
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Amazing show... Please don't stop....can never have enough alt history

IAmTherefore...
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I would love a discussion between Chris (Dunn) and Chris (King), simply a Chris discussion!

robertmortimer
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You should get in contact with Matt Beall, he is also an owner of the vases and hosts his own Podcast called Limitless, he would b a good guest to talk to as well. He owns quite a few of these vases and has worked closely with Ben and his colleagues.

DanielAbbottSuenTV
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Keep posting quality content and your channel will grow exponentially 👍🏼

WoeWoeWoe
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great work, keep growing the conversation!

AustinKoleCarlisle
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If I had a lathe on hand I would try turning granite with a Tangentail cutter that is diamond impregnated, I also wonder how hard is the material in an asteroid like the dagger that King Tut had.

timetodopatriotstuff
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at the beginning of the video is the inside bottom of a broken vase. The key to understanding how the bottom was made is if the tool mark is a spiral. If it is a spiral, the inner bottom is machined on a lathe where the movement of the tool is moved by a screw.

vladimirkaspar
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Good podcast. What is the electrical method you mentioned after 40 mins?

mickdaly
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The machines and associated infrastructure likely does still exist somewhere on the planet, perhaps not much, likely only bits of it but there's gotta be some left somewhere. More than likely under water somewhere and very, very deep..

CoffeeFiend
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There's hundreds of manufacturing facilities in China that can manufacture vases to any specification for funery or architectural industries. European equipment manufacturers have been in China since the 1980s, and China has replicated their equipment used in their manufacturing. China and India had a huge effect on stone manufacturing in North America, which majorly shifted to offshore supply.

GroberWeisenstein
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Hi. Why always vases? Could they be some kind of resonator, bell ? Had anyone investigated their vibrational qualities? Otherwise why the exactitude? Or....

hanssharma
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cool clip. Been into this subject for years. Got experience in stonework as well. I think we are way off on the cutting and manufacturing of it all. At aswan it's clear cut that some kind of boring tech was present. Boring tech like a sand blaster or waterjet aka pressure cutter. It was this same boring tech that was implemented in the Serapeum. All these balloons measuring corners on the boxes and thinking they weren't machined because they're not perfect 90s missed the secret that sits in plain sight. Many of the unpolished boxes are sitting there wholly complete, without a single trace of chisel or saw cut on them. Saw manual or mechanized leaves smooth surface, chisel leaves grooves. Those boxes are super rough granite, yet finished and precise. The same boring tech was used to shape them, as at aswan. That tech is a jet cutter no doubt it my mind, with a variable setting. Wide like 1.5 feet or all the way to needle point. I have a feeling alot of these artifacts were cut with this tech. All their basalt was cut with it, all granite. When the setting is needle point, it leaves grooves like a circular saw. I don't think it was a sand blaster, or a jet cutter, but something that works like that, a high-pressure energy stream. And this energy stream could be curved, like you shoot out water out of a hose in a straight line, but this jet could be shot out as a hook. Terrifying tech was working aswan. Dual use purpose no doubt, boring tech and a weapons platform.

Kitties-of-Doom
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You shape the outside then bore a hole with a similar technique we see elsewhere in Egypt then its about time and abrasives to do the fine shaping and polishing.

paulwerline
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In my mind, I see a tool that is spinning into the inside of the vase. It is a cutting tool that is spinning into the rock, and the cutting tools expands as it enter the initial cut. Keeps expanding to a precise point to get the precise thickness of the walls. Would be a very sophisticated cutting machine, industrial. It would have to be to cut stone of that hardness like granite.

jimmydaniels
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Was it cut from both sides at same time to keep equal pressure on both sides?

Robert
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love your channel buddy just subscribed. I think these vases were used to store chemicals. How they are made is a big question.

ThomasRonnberg