cladking Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Jammer Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Clive;
> >
> > With a 45 degree slope the ramp would reach
> 150 RC
> > high when 150 RC long with 45 degree sides
> 150 rc
> > wide at base (plus the witdth of
> ramp-road)...
> >
> > I would see it faced with semi dressed stone
> laid
> > at a 52 degree to horizontal face to prevent
> > "blowout", and filled with a friction adding
> fill,
> > such as the chips n' chnks from the cutting
> and
> > dressing areas. I think a layer of strong
> material
> > to reinforce every meter or two could make a
> lot
> > of sense, say maybe a reed-mat from the Nile?
> This
> > would prevent slippage of fill side to side
> and up
> > and down, and be stronger as compression
> grew.
> >
> > Take a lot of manpower to drag those blocks
> up
> > that ramp?
> > You betcha.
> >
> > So much so that as the layers rose the
> blocks
> > might get smaller?
> > Makes sense...
> >
> > Lets look at the pyramid, lo and behold, the
> > blocks get smaller higher up...
> > Coincidence? Mayhap...
> >
> > Now, what would you use the semi dressed
> stone you
> > faced the ramp with after tear down?
> > Possibly walls and sub structures aroung the
> great
> > pyramids.
> >
> > And the fill?
> > Make pretty good fill for the causeways and
> sub
> > construct foundations, mightn't it?
> >
> > Is this the definitive answer?
> > How the heck would I know, not having found
> a
> > written record to prove it...
> >
> > But it at least explains the how-what-where
> part
> > of your challenge.
> >
> > Jammer
> >
> > ps, This ramp would stay smaller in volume
> than
> > the pyramid it built btw.
> > How? The pyramid itself takes away from ramp
> > volume as it climbs, supplying it with a
> solid
> > foundation base.
>
>
> 45 degrees!!!
>
> I have more than a little doubt that this angle is
> scalable even without a two ton stone in tow. At
> this angle it will require one ton of force just
> to stop it from sliding down hill. Even a 30
> degree slope is untenable. 15 degrees is a
> tremendous obstacle.
>
> The interstate highway system has almost no slopes
> over 6 degrees. There are a few up to 8 degrees
> that required special waivers. Trucks can barely
> climb these at all and they are far more powerful
> than even a large team of ancient Egyptians. With
> the proper gearing trucks would have little
> trouble, of course, but most aren't equipped for
> such grades.
>
>
> Perhaps men could keep their balance and pull a
> rope DOWN a 35 degree grade while the rope is
> dragging a stone up the opposite side.
that's precisely Clive's theory . Only he figures they dragged the material up the allready clad surface. and that the workers rode up and down in little carts. If ya don't believe me...ask him
>
>
>
>
> ____________
> Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
warwick
" I have always found that the main obstacle to free
association on these boards is the broad
misconception that what we do not know is more
significant than what we do know."
Warwick L Nixon, March 8, 2019