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04-12-2026, 10:51 PM
This post was last modified: 04-12-2026, 11:10 PM by DPKing. 
Hey, when you don't have steel, you got to make do with the tech of the time, stone blocks
Giving 42 atm and 538 degrees Celsius, the numbers needed for this reaction
https://youtu.be/EwtLRSPMa04?t=4542
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Diagram of the angled stop block at the base of the primary shaft used to pressurize the structure with water
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(04-12-2026, 10:55 PM)DPKing Wrote: Diagram of the angled stop block at the base of the primary shaft used to pressurize the structure with water
[Image: https://denyignorance.com/uploader/image...6768cb.png]
Do you have that image without the pink rectangle?
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It has been boarded up for tourists but you can see it in the bottom right corner of this pic
http://isida-project.org/egypt_2012/dash...anck_e.jpg
Earlier large pic from another source with no additional marking
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/fig13_320131285
The Drawing is from Italian architects Maragioglio and Rinaldi, who conducted an exploration of the structure in the 1960
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(04-11-2026, 09:16 AM)ArMaP Wrote: The fact that that specific chamber smells of ammonia today doesn't mean that it smelt of ammonia at the time it was used, so we need to assume that to apply the ammonia theory.
PS: what's so important about ammonia?
It's from bats. They were well known "pests" of the ancient pyramids (and anyplace else with a dark, cave-like interior.) Nowadays they try to keep bats out of places like that, but it's a time-consuming effort.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Cowofgold_Essay...ent_egypt/
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Some discussion on the bat theory here
https://youtu.be/aaAKuMmN8MM?list=PLeiFX...AOL2&t=994
Concentrated staining at the top of the chambers where the pressure/heat of the chemical reaction was taking place
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(04-13-2026, 07:38 PM)DPKing Wrote: It has been boarded up for tourists but you can see it in the bottom right corner of this pic
http://isida-project.org/egypt_2012/dash...anck_e.jpg
Earlier large pic from another source with no additional marking
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/fig13_320131285
The Drawing is from Italian architects Maragioglio and Rinaldi, who conducted an exploration of the structure in the 1960
Thanks.
As expected, there's no "stop block" on the original diagram, just a passage.
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(04-12-2026, 10:51 PM)DPKing Wrote: Hey, when you don't have steel, you got to make do with the tech of the time, stone blocks
Giving 42 atm and 538 degrees Celsius, the numbers needed for this reaction
https://youtu.be/EwtLRSPMa04?t=4542
[Image: https://denyignorance.com/uploader/image...4e39b4.png]
The (huge) problem here is that none of the seams are leakproof.
The whole structure is riddled with holes because of how badly the blocks fit together. Even with the mortar.
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04-14-2026, 08:43 PM
This post was last modified: 04-14-2026, 08:46 PM by DPKing. 
(04-14-2026, 02:16 AM)ArMaP Wrote: Thanks.
As expected, there's no "stop block" on the original diagram, just a passage.
Why do you think the architects who explored this pyramid randomly added this pit at the bottom of the shaft?
As well as other diagrams?
https://isida-project.ucoz.com/egypt_201...ur_red.htm
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Pic of the boarded up pit plus the top of the angled stop block
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