Our website would like to use cookies to store information on your computer. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work as a result. Find out more about how we use cookies.

Login or Register

Powered by
Powered by Novacaster
 
So *that's* how it's done :-)
by Simon at 16:11 15/02/04 (Blogs::Simon)
Want to move a huge block of stone, don't have a massive crane, a pulley, thousands of workers etc?

No bother - all you need is some insight.

http://www.theforgottentechnology.com/
--
simon
<< Sale! Sale! All Clues Must Go! Experiments with RSS >>
View Comments (Threaded Mode) Printer Version
So *that's* how it's done :-) Simon - 16:11 15/02/04
Re: So *that's* how it's done :-) Bruce Ure - 20:44 15/02/04
LOL! I was reading that and the more I did, the more pages I went through, the more I thought, hang on, he's trying to sell something here. He's not actually saying /how/ he does it, he's just saying how wonderful it is. And on the last page, joy of joys, is a paypal link.

And that's not to rubbish his technique; I'm sure it's meritable and I'd love to see what it is. I just thought it was funny, like an Amway or Kleeneze video.

If anyone fancies going in together to get a copy out of curiosity I'm up for it: it's only 20 bucks, innit.

Do we think we know what the technique is already? Might still be nice to see his film.

bruce

Re: So *that's* how it's done :-) Simon - 11:02 16/02/04
He explains in detail precisely what his method is here:

http://www.theforgottentechnology.com/Page6.htm

... ie you place two rocks/whatever underneath the slab near to the balance point, allowing you to then make use of a top-mounted counterweight to bring the slab up onto only one of them.

At that point, you can rotate the slab in a horizontal circle, and (being offset from the midpoint) the slab makes some progress in one direction of another. Like walking a fridge.

There are some MPGs, which aren't linked in but appear in the source of the page:

1
2
3
4 (note position of bucket on the ground at left hand end, relative to end of slab, at start and finish).

Having moved a 9 ton gate made of rock, at the Coral Castle in Florida, with just my little finger I can testify that - if you get something heavy balanced just right, you can move it very easily.

The trick is not to try and lift dead weight - make it lift itself!
--
simon