I figured it out ! ! ! It is an air mover ! The workers in the kings chamber needs air to replace the air being burned-off by the torches - so just pour water down the 45 degree sloping tunnel - vent it through another water way going out to the Sphinx Nile river - and air will continuously flow through the 2 vents as it will get "dragged in" by the vacuum that the running water will cause.
During the Egyptian Middle Kingdom, Lake Moeris was only 17m above sea level. The Giza plateau is 100m above sea level. At it's highest point, in Paleolithic times, Moeris was only 37m above sea level. Lake Moeris was never high enough to supply water by gravity feed to a walled in moat that would reach 40m above the plateau to feed the pump. It just didn't happen. Your pyramid pump theory cannot overcome that contradiction.
@zostedguy Well, there could have been an underground tunnel that was itself a ram pump to pump water up to the moat. That is just conjecture though, and I have no idea how much water such a system would have drained from the lake just to fill the moat. The lake by the way, is about 80 km from giza, so that is quite a stretch.
@Indygoguy This design actually does horizontal or downhill boost amazingly efficient. I have vids of transferring water 500 feet away at 4 gals per minute. Considering the output shaft is 3/4" square (smaller than my thumb), that's pretty amazing from 4' of head.
I figured it out ! ! ! It is an air mover ! The workers in the kings chamber needs air to replace the air being burned-off by the torches - so just pour water down the 45 degree sloping tunnel - vent it through another water way going out to the Sphinx Nile river - and air will continuously flow through the 2 vents as it will get "dragged in" by the vacuum that the running water will cause.
How does that sound ! Logical ?
mrnewagemotor 1 week ago
check out the pyramid code great documentary.
Katharsis540 10 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
If your interested on that then go here
/watch?v=DFLIX3fEeE4&feature=related
7Nexus21 11 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
If your interested on that then go here
/watch?v=DFLIX3fEeE4&feature=related
7Nexus21 11 months ago
During the Egyptian Middle Kingdom, Lake Moeris was only 17m above sea level. The Giza plateau is 100m above sea level. At it's highest point, in Paleolithic times, Moeris was only 37m above sea level. Lake Moeris was never high enough to supply water by gravity feed to a walled in moat that would reach 40m above the plateau to feed the pump. It just didn't happen. Your pyramid pump theory cannot overcome that contradiction.
Indygoguy 1 year ago
@Indygoguy Thanks. Now that there are better tools available (google earth with relative elevations) it allows better viewing of Moeris' full lay.
Even King Min dammed the Nile to flood this lake . . .
zostedguy 1 year ago
@zostedguy Well, there could have been an underground tunnel that was itself a ram pump to pump water up to the moat. That is just conjecture though, and I have no idea how much water such a system would have drained from the lake just to fill the moat. The lake by the way, is about 80 km from giza, so that is quite a stretch.
Indygoguy 1 year ago
@Indygoguy This design actually does horizontal or downhill boost amazingly efficient. I have vids of transferring water 500 feet away at 4 gals per minute. Considering the output shaft is 3/4" square (smaller than my thumb), that's pretty amazing from 4' of head.
zostedguy 1 year ago