Having the name wally walington is a unfair advantage when building walls
@pandoraspocks4102
Жыл бұрын
I read a book on last names and how they relate to your being it was interesting to say the least
@chrisgreene4739
9 ай бұрын
That’s sir Wallace Wallington III to you.
@dnjj1845
8 ай бұрын
Lol
@bl8388
5 ай бұрын
It also gave him social leverage in high school when all the nerdy chicks liked the sound of his name and made passes at Wally.
@puresynergyflo
4 ай бұрын
@@bl8388social “leverage”. 😉 I see what you did there.
@liquiddw2
Жыл бұрын
Wally: i bet you i could build Stonehenge by myself Guy at the bar: you're crazy Wally:
@ThunderChunky101
Жыл бұрын
Wally - doesn't let on that he moved his 30 tonne barn with nothing but a pivot, a lever, and his son. "how much do you bet?!"
@danielbunyan7247
10 ай бұрын
Hold my beer
@batcollins3714
2 ай бұрын
Stonehenge is a pathetic jumble of rubble compared to South American ancient cities
@rattytattyratnett
28 күн бұрын
@@batcollins3714 stonehenge was built approximately 3000 years earlier.
@rowgler1
9 ай бұрын
It seems like about twenty years ago I bought this DVD from Wally. These techniques came in pretty handy over the years. I showed some guys how to raise an I-beam under a house. They were amazed. Another time I raised an 8' long granite slab to fit into an oak frame to build a custom dinner table. It was built in the room and will never leave it. No one could figure out how I did it alone. Wally showed me how.
@RedDogForge
7 ай бұрын
You have a site? Love to see your work
@thedude777OP
7 ай бұрын
Is this DVD still available?
@rowgler1
7 ай бұрын
This channel contains the content of the DVD. I don't remember where I first saw it advertised, what year, or how much it cost, but it was definitly worth it. It's here for free now.
@ginnyjollykidd
6 ай бұрын
I have a very heavy computer hutch. My brother in law, a big, burly guy, moved it into my condo on the second floor. I didn't want it on the wall he put it, so I got some sliders and put them underneath with little lifting. On a carpet, the sliders are awesome, decreasing the friction factor immensely. I shifted one side a little, then the other, and I was able to walk it to the opposite wall. No, I did not do it as fast as he did. I didn't need to. I had time on my hands. Even if I didn't have sliders, even moving it an inch each side would get it to the opposite side. And turning it a complete 180° turn gave a great moving advantage. My brother in law was astonished. Give a person a long enough lever and a fulcrum on which to set it, one can move the world!
@alanmeyers3957
2 ай бұрын
Maybe you should go cut pyramid stones with precision and lift them into place by yourself, make a video, I’ll even buy it!
@vookudlak1
Жыл бұрын
I found this guy on Instagram. So many people are mad thinking that aliens created all these structures. But in fourth-grade science class we learned about mechanical advantage. 😂😂😂
@bobsekret9161
Жыл бұрын
Me too
@bulldog1010123
Жыл бұрын
Yeah moving the blocks isn’t the confusing apart. Most people saw Wally 20 years ago. The thing is how did they cut granite which is a 7 on the mohs scale to extreme precision comparable to todays MACHINED stones and they did it with hand tools. Tube drill holes in right angle corners that are extremely sharp. The perimeter of the base of the pyramid x 43,200 is the exact circumference of the earths equator, the pyramids align perfectly with the lat. and long. of the Earth and Orion’s Belt, the granite blocks inside are finished so perfect the space in between them is 1/50th of an inch and can’t fit a razor blade between them. So with all of that known, moving the blocks is kindergarten shit to them of course, but it’s how the hell they make the huge stones and cut and polish them to machine level quality and mirror finish with hand tools? It’s just bonkers. And no I don’t think it was aliens, they were just smarter than we think. Also Wally is making his blocks with concrete, Egyptians didn’t make blocks they removed the hardest/heaviest rocks like basalt, quartzite, and granite from the earth.
@vookudlak1
Жыл бұрын
@@bulldog1010123 look online it show you how you do it you drive a spike inside of it on the shape that you want it
@itsnotatoober
Жыл бұрын
@@bulldog1010123 You're just lying. 90% of these conspiracy theories mention how big and heavy they are. That's the level theyre on. Even though he made this 25 years ago. There are answers to everything, you just need to learn and try, and most of all, be able to imagine that other people were just as smart as you. And in all honesty, some were much smarter. The one thing you never hear from the idiots is "I dont know". That's what makes them jump to stupid things like sound cutting and aliens.
@ACuriousChild
Жыл бұрын
@@bulldog1010123 Based on what you said - What do you BELIEVE what did "the power" of the pyramid "builders" consist of ...? .... to my estimation you are getting closer to the answer by your approach ... don't let your doubts stop you!
@effbobomb6555
Жыл бұрын
He took ‘prove it’ personally. If one guy can do this imagine what thousands could do. Probably some awe inspiring things.
@aeoteroa818
Жыл бұрын
Thousands of smart people with a lifetime of skill In their craft.
@Floedekage
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but but but... Imagine what a alien could do!
@thejunior9497
Жыл бұрын
@@aeoteroa818Tbf it would be more like just a few smart people (engineers, architects, few more) and thousands of human beasts as a workforce applying the techniques taught to them for 18hrs a day.
@ACuriousChild
Жыл бұрын
Well ... someone (WALLY) seems to have figured out that strength isn't in the "muscle" but in THE HEART - using the tool between THE EARS! - I suppose ...
@somefuckstolemynick
Жыл бұрын
That's the important thing. This is one guy over years or at most a few decades. The Egyptians had thousands of years to perfect techniques for quarrying, shaping and transporting stone, and thousands and thousands of workers to do it. But yeah, an even more ancient civilization for which we have zero evidence, using hypothetical tools no one has created seems more likely. /s
@PCMcGee1
2 ай бұрын
One man, using the most powerful computer on Earth.
@ghostass422
8 ай бұрын
This is a warrior against himan stupidity, this is what critically thinking, able human looks like and we should all look up to common sense people like him
@josuuv
Ай бұрын
As a stiupid himan can wally teach spelling ??
@adammillwardart7831
10 ай бұрын
Hmm, I wonder if some of the odd protrusions on stones used in Megalithic structures could have been designed as built in fulcrums and/or pivot points.
@BleachedWheat
7 ай бұрын
After watching this, I'd say it's highly likely.
@samwillard5688
Ай бұрын
Exactly my thought.
@kennethjohnson2983
12 күн бұрын
Quite possibly.
@Planted.Aesthetics
2 күн бұрын
I would say this is how they moved blocks, but quarrying them with such precision, and carrying them 1000' miles is still unexplained not to mention the megalithic walls that oddly shaped blocks fit together so tight a human hair cannot fit between.
@mattstroker3742
2 күн бұрын
@planted Agreed. And remember: the scale on which it was done. Without billions of population. The distances involved. The numbers. Suzes. Weights. One or even 100 or 1000 blocks might not be a issue but 100s of thousands or millions? Not just in Egypt but in Japan, china, Peru, Egypt... Just to name a few. And we know they're under water too. So... even more. And very likely lots more underground and covered by huge woods.
@Fiona2254
2 ай бұрын
Those ancient people had, literally, the same brain and brain capacity we do. Saying aliens did it is dismissive and disrespectful.
@webstercat
Ай бұрын
100% correct
@James-oo7bv
23 күн бұрын
I’d be willing to bet that ancient people were way more intelligent than current humans.
@IvoTichelaar
16 күн бұрын
@@James-oo7bv we're probably equal in our own environments. You develop the skills you use.
@NichaelCramer
3 ай бұрын
The argument that “Building the Pyramids/Stonehenge/etc was impossible!” usually translates to “Since I can’t figure out how to do it after thinking about it for 10 minutes, clearly an entire culture -given decades or even centuries to think about it- couldn’t have done it either.
@donnieallemanni8572
2 ай бұрын
Christopher Columbus said anything is impossible until someone shows you how. And we all know what he did.
@G0Ben
2 ай бұрын
Yes - he got the radius of the earth wrong.
@MrMAC8964
2 ай бұрын
@@donnieallemanni8572 vikings did it long before him
@TheZeusFury
2 ай бұрын
@@MrMAC8964 Yes, but they sort of "winged it". Columbus's real achievement was to trace a consistent route based on the seasonality of the trade winds
@recoilrob324
Ай бұрын
Yes...in time you can rig up levers and whatnot to move large stones....but what we're not seeing is the HARD part of the ancient megalithic constructions which was the quarrying and transportation of the stones hundreds of miles to the building site. Then there's the problem of the timeline the Egyptian authorities claim it took the pyramid construction where a block had to be placed in its' final position every 15 minutes or less. Tell me how using what the video demonstrates would possibly work in 15 minutes even on the ground level let alone hundreds of feet in elevation. This absolutely does NOT demonstrate how the pyramids could have been built unless it took hundreds of years....which it might have...but in any case the 'authorities' cannot be right in their timelines.
@Traderjoe
2 ай бұрын
Stonehenge was probably an ancient engineering challenge event where engineers showed off their skills lifting heavy stuff
@ferociousgustafson4040
3 ай бұрын
8 billion people on the planet and not yet 70,000 views. I don’t think it’s a mystery how technology gets forgotten.
@toshikotanaka3249
2 ай бұрын
It's esoteric until needed, then it becomes common.
@krakoosh1
2 ай бұрын
It’s not because of the lack of KZitem views that technology gets forgotten.
@kaoskronostyche9939
2 ай бұрын
I worked my life in construction. I can assure you it only takes one generation for knowledge to be lost.
@toshikotanaka3249
2 ай бұрын
@@kaoskronostyche9939 There is knowledge that is useful and knowledge for the sake of knowledge. The latter is useful if you're a contestant on Jeopardy.
@kaoskronostyche9939
2 ай бұрын
@@toshikotanaka3249 WTF kind of stupid ass comment is that? I SPECIFIED CONSTRUCTION - very useful knowledge. I said NOTHING about Jeopardy. Are you stupid? Your comment is utterly meaningless and irrelevant. Learn to read then learn to think ...
@msims2006
3 ай бұрын
Your grandfather's work was fascinating when I came across it years ago and now it has become personally relevant. I developed a nerve injury that recently worsened with sciatica; I'm in constant pain and my physical abilities are reduced. I'm an estatekeeper in exchange for accomodation so it's been pretty demoralizing and troubling to struggle with the manual labour involved. Rewatching these videos did more than remind me how much I enjoyed studying physics in school; they've given me inspiration and plenty of ideas for working around my injury as I heal. Brains over brawn. Patience and ingenuity. It can be as simple as wood, stone and time. Thank you both for the leverage I needed to move my world again.
@samwillard5688
Ай бұрын
i am in the same position, except that I deal with arthritis in both hands. This will help immensely also.
@Christopher____RPM
Жыл бұрын
Midwesterners in khakis are absolute mad lads
@jakej2680
3 ай бұрын
Giving up on trying to be cool is a superpower i swear 😂
@shitpostingcrusader7966
9 ай бұрын
As a former construction worker on the pyramids of Giza. I can confirm this is how we did it
@LoganShelton-rh3lp
7 ай бұрын
Why wouldn't you use a crane?
@gorak9000
3 ай бұрын
@@LoganShelton-rh3lp Yeah, stupid farrows - should've just called Mammoet, talked to Jeoff, plunk down your frankincense and gold, and presto, a crane will show up at your pyramid site! Pretty sure back then their phone number was 🐘▮◢ (aka elephant, block, fulcrum)
@triedzidono
2 ай бұрын
@@LoganShelton-rh3lp they did, with rosemary & dill. Then kept working.
@TheZeusFury
2 ай бұрын
@@LoganShelton-rh3lp Wally's work sort of answers your question: if you use a crane to move a 20 tons block you have to provide the energy to lift the 20 ton block all in one go, furthermore you need materials capable of sustaining the whole 20 tons. If you use levers and pivot points most of the mass is discharged on the ground because you create a slight imbalance and the mass on one side of the pivot point is almost perfectly balanced by the mass on the other side and you just have to input the difference. If you want to lift the block one meter, you still have to provide the final amount of energy required to lift it in the air, but in the case of levers and wood planks you can split the total required force in small increments that one or few persons can easily provide.
@walterrumohr7090
Ай бұрын
How many times had you resurrected?
@NichaelCramer
3 ай бұрын
Quick summary: “You gotta be smarter than the rocks.”
@toddthreess9624
3 ай бұрын
First rule of Big Stones Club is, gravity always wins.
@moepow8160
Ай бұрын
Leverage is a powerful tool and can be used in so many ways. I don't need to move weights as heavy as this, but as a disabled person I can do a lot of moving with leverage, I cut and stack firewood with leverage, build small sheds, move bolders on my property all with leverage because I cannot left a lot of wieght. And remember, there are different types of leverage, like with pullies & ropes. It does take longer to get a job done, but I'm retired and have the time. The more you use it, the more ideas you come up with. So when you have no help, don't stop your project. See if leverage can help you get the job done for you.
@DouglasHoppa
Жыл бұрын
Wally....the Class of "64" (St. Lawrence High School, Utica, MI) got wind of this video.....and congratulate you on these pursuits of yours. They are fascinating!!!!!!
@electriccoconut
2 ай бұрын
THIS MAN IS SHOWING YOU A TECHNIQUE THAT CAN BE APPLIED IN MOST SITUATIONS. YOU HAVE JUST WATCHED HIM. PLEASE STOP MAKEING UP SILLY SITUATIONS MAKE UP YOUR OWN SOLUTION LEARN !
@HopeisAnger
2 ай бұрын
First off, why are you yelling? We will either learn, or we won't. You have no ability to change the outcome.
@GalloPazzesco
2 ай бұрын
Just incredible! Subscribed, bell rang, commented, liked, upvoted, shared ..... may the algorithm gods smile favorably upon your channel.
@theArtofGabo
Жыл бұрын
Joe rogan should see this
@mememachine5244
Жыл бұрын
Thought the exact same thing as soon as I saw it.
@crnasilvac
Жыл бұрын
Check Baalbek stones and tell me that it could have been done this way...
@MehmetMehmet-y8c
Жыл бұрын
@@crnasilvac"uhh yeah? What about this?? No?? I knew it. Aliens!"
@crnasilvac
Жыл бұрын
@@MehmetMehmet-y8c No aliens, I don't believe i them...just some ancient technology...check out Praveen Mohan and his findings in India, he has a great youtube channel.
@rivercityrampage252
Жыл бұрын
@@crnasilvacyes
@paulfrost8952
2 ай бұрын
“Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.” Archimedes
@gottagift
3 ай бұрын
Twenty years ago, some fellows and i had the job of digging an elevator shaft pit with shovels. It was 10 foot square and 6 foot deep. Near the bottom of the pit we ran into a boulder that easily weighed 800 lbs. My solution to the obstacle was to carve a niche out of the wall and roll the boulder into it. Precision paid of as the boulders final resting spot was flush with the wall. On the same job, we encountered a massive concrete wheel that served as some type of balance at the top of an ancient elevator. That had to weight 1,200 lbs. To lower that from the forth floor to ground i suggest we take a long rope tied to the wheel, loop it twice around a support beam and three of us could lower the wheel in a controlled descent. Co-worker asked "are you sure?" It worked flawlessly. I later moved that wheel 200 feet to the basement by myself using only four short pieces of pipe as rollers.....
@batcollins3714
2 ай бұрын
And then you woke up?
@ShawnPack-k6j
Ай бұрын
I lowered about 2500 - 3000 lbs of a oak tree by myself, same concept of wrapping the rope around the beam twice I used the base of the tree instead .
@HobbyOrganist
2 күн бұрын
Ive amazed co-workers with machines and things at the shop I was able to move myself with nothing more than a couple of steel pipes a block of wood and a board like a 2x4. That's really all you need to be able to move an amazing amount of weight, once you have the weight on a couple of round steel pipes, logs, or similar, it takes very little to move it. A block of wood and a bar or board can lift one side up an inch, slide a board under that, do the same on the other side and you've lifted the weight up that far, all you need is more blocks of wood to get it higher. The real trick is getting a 100 ton block of stone across miles of desert sand, and then raising it up a 100 feet!
@danielbunyan7247
10 ай бұрын
Having seen a work crew install stone columns in front of my house; I know this is real. Wanna know how the pyramids got built? Dont ask an academic, ask I guy who moves rocks and build houses for a living. Wally is spot on.
@danielbunyan7247
10 ай бұрын
12:27 "Went real well. See I changed my shirt as I got all sweated up out there" A man of truth.
@krakoosh1
2 ай бұрын
This is not how the pyramids got built
@PaxHeadroom
2 ай бұрын
@@krakoosh1you're just going to insist that with zero explanation or proof? lmao
@samwillard5688
Ай бұрын
I was going to say the same lol. Academics know nothing about real world things.
@ts109
Ай бұрын
We used to use some of these methods to move large timbers around timber framer framing.
@daveallen5747
2 ай бұрын
This needs to be seen by more people.
@JeepITguy
3 ай бұрын
Seems like the more slight members of the crew, used as balance, would make this go a lot smoother. Wouldn't take long to train, either. "When I say move, everyone move to where I am pointing, and sit down." Would make it a lot easier on the hoist and spin crew, too, not having to lug around their bodyweight+ in counterbalance weights.
@tonywatson987
2 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this a few years ago, along with your other videos about building the pyramids and moving the barn - thank you for resurrecting it, Wally!
@HooverVilleify
2 ай бұрын
Wally is an ancient alien showing us how to make Stone hinges.
@AR-fh2uh
11 ай бұрын
I have watched this video many times, and every time, I think this is what one man can do. Imagine what 1000 can do
@ryanberman5314
10 ай бұрын
Then take into account the pyramid builders had 100s of thousands working at a time
@petejones6827
3 ай бұрын
or 10,000 or 100,000 slaves
@Minotona
3 ай бұрын
@@petejones6827Its impossible to feed that many ppl gathered at one place. An army at that size would have to farm planning years in advance, foraging & grazing over vast terrain, let alone doing this in a middle of a desert..
@Rai2M
3 ай бұрын
@@petejones6827 It's a myth, completely debunked many times. Slaves weren't allowed to work on pyramids.
@jakej2680
3 ай бұрын
@@MinotonaYou understand that there are cities with tens of millions of people, right? And that they don't atarve to death? There were cities with 80,000 people at the same time the pyramids were being built. Yes they are near a desert but they are also near the Nile which was and still is one of the largest agricultural areas in the world and a major transportation route for goods.
@MGBranco
Ай бұрын
As anybody showed this to Joe Rogan? Ajsahah
@sative3355
Ай бұрын
Words cannot describe how cool it is watching you move these blocks
@StopProject2025
2 ай бұрын
The Moai may have been moved by rocking side to side, or “walking,” as legend has it.
@craigdutton6072
8 күн бұрын
Yep 👍 I often have to move massive iorn double ovens by myself 😂a piece of pipe Is my best friend ❤people will say have you got a fork lift 😂yes your looking at him 😂
@bradwilliams6550
Жыл бұрын
This guy’s going back to the basics and making me feel dumb.
@jakej2680
3 ай бұрын
Don't feel too bad. If you had to move rocks by hand for your whole life you probably would figure out some ways to make it a little easier.
@Adshercott
3 ай бұрын
I don't know how the pricing scales, but this could not have been cheap to put together. Thanks for sharing it.
@snowbird151
Ай бұрын
Amazing work you have done Wally , you made everything look so easy. Great job. !!!
@wallingtonw
Ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@graphixkillzzz
9 ай бұрын
conspiracy theorists: i can't think of a way to move the stones at Stonehenge or the pyramids. must have been aliens\ancient civilization. Wally: hold my 2x4 😐
@TheZeusFury
2 ай бұрын
One of the myths about Stonehenge is that Merlin built it alone. It might not be entirely true, but a tiny group of people coordinated by a smart visionary man who understood physics's mysteries ahead of its time could have done it. And who would dispute the power of such man?
@inoiz8395
Жыл бұрын
I love this because I'm sure at one time or another, Someone told you "You can't move that by yourself!"
@davidrogers6709
15 күн бұрын
Brilliant Mind! Your videos should be required veiwing in High School before our kids start believing the PhDs who claim grand theories surrounding ancient stone work. Wally, thank you!
@Otsalia
10 ай бұрын
Now imagine this with hundreds, if not thousands of people pulling ropes, pulling levers, pushing, cutting, grinding, building cranes 20 meters or more. On an empty lot, with no buildings, no children, no streets to damage, no building permits, no environmental regulations, no working hours, no safety at work, and a long etc. Now do you understand why no one replicates it nowadays? Currently, we only build according to what the law allows. That's why our cranes are pathetic compared to those of antiquity, they are just more resistant. Have you seen the Chinese shipyards? Look at the size of their current cranes.
@itmaslanka
2 күн бұрын
Did they lay a concrete path for 250 miles ! And why would early humans do this extra work when it was hard enough just to survive .!?! “ Sorry wife I have to go move a rock . I’ll be back in 8 months ! “ 😅😅😅
@miked28711
Жыл бұрын
This is incredible! Well done Wally
@pandoraspocks4102
Жыл бұрын
The pivot point
@pnuttheclownh2254
2 ай бұрын
entertaining, factual, humorous and just plain nice.
@vermouth310
22 күн бұрын
You need a continuous hard base to start with at the fulcrum (How do you construct a continuous integral base?). How do you do that, without the fulcrum itself being crushed and “crushing” the base and subsiding?
@PirateChiefPC1
20 күн бұрын
I've used his technique to raise super heavy logs onto my sawmill. I have a manual mill, no hydraulics.
@nadronnocojr
Ай бұрын
Sad that it doesn’t have more likes , this is way more amazing , and entertaining and educational than 90% of the crap in the world today….
@MrBollocks10
2 ай бұрын
Wally is the man.👍
@personal-qs6dz
2 ай бұрын
This is possibly the best video of the past 50 years. It's a punch in the face of all these conspirative dumbasses. Thank you sir.
@joshuahanley7251
10 ай бұрын
Anytime I see these ignorant charlatans out here claiming we can't move megaliths without alien tech and such, blah blah blah, I always refer them to Wally's work here with levers, fulcrums, offsets, etc, that allow a single mam to manipluate multi-ton blocks. Personally, I think you've absolutely nailed the proof of concept for how much of this was done in the past. Pure engineering genius.
@TobiasC-mg4zk
6 ай бұрын
Look up the archaeologist guys from Russia who recreated the ancient drill techniques used by Egyptian craftsmen. I see these aliens dingbats fussing over a core sample with “spiral” striations. The granite core samples produced by these two guys have the same “spiral” striations which completely debunks another ancient alien theory that there were special high powered coring machines 5000 years ago. The Egyptian drills are ingenious and there are old paintings of craftsmen using them. Unless you know what the paintings are actually depicting you would think they were some obscure religious staff with amulets tied to them. These are crooked sticks with sandbags tied to the offset as weights for the flywheel action. The cutting is a copper tube with corundum abrasive and water kept on the bore with a little clay.
@alextownsend6662
2 ай бұрын
He poured the block. He didn’t cut it out of a bigger block in a quarry many miles away and move it there.
@TheZeusFury
2 ай бұрын
@@alextownsend6662 1) cutting blocks from quarries is not considered a lost/disputed tech there is no need to show it. 2) If you work in a quarry you are usually on solid ground, Wally demonstrated that with sideways levers he can tilt the block to one side and then to the other while inserting small planks 3) The small planks allow to work as a fulcrum to tilt the block lengthwise allowing the insertion of the 2 metal fulcrum. 4) he shows that with the system of the two pivot points a single man can move a block of 20000 pounds dozens of feet with an extremely high precision and control. What he does not show is how to move this block on ground grassland BUt: 1) given the reduced number of people required, it is not difficult to think that a squad of few people with wood mallets could move ahead, clear the path, and compress the dirt. 2) since the whole weight of the monolith is on one fulcrum at each "step" you can have a squad of few men to move thick wood plates and a flat stone on the landing point of the next step so the fulcrum will not sink in the ground but land on a solid surface that spreads the weight. These above are (in my opinion) reasonable assumptions that do not require fancy tech, and a minimal number of people could pull off with a simple level of coordination (crews on tall ships used sea shanties to coordinate the work at the capstan ad other maneuvers, I can speculate that a few drummer and a ritual song could do the same)
@Fiona2254
2 ай бұрын
@@alextownsend6662if I’m not mistaken he has a video on how to move the blocks. The ancestors didn’t need (spell edit) 👽 to figure stuff out. Their brains were as developed and big as ours.
@joshuahanley7251
2 ай бұрын
@@alextownsend6662 What does it matter if he pours or quarried the stone?! The point is how simple it is to move huge weights using materials they would have had or had the equivalent of. Sorry if it hurts your feelings that it wasn't aliens.
@APF_CNC
Жыл бұрын
I think this man built the pyramids
@vito7pt
11 ай бұрын
Hahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahah
@wheelie98
Ай бұрын
I watched one of these Wally videos about 10 years ago, then used the concepts to help move a heavy hydraulic press. It was fun & scary, tipping the machine back and forth, slipping more and more blocks underneath, until we were able to get a pallet jack under the machine. Brains are so useful when programmed. Thanks, Wally.
@AveragePicker
2 ай бұрын
This does make any sense. He does this without using Bagdad batteries from a sacred geometry power plant pyramid and frequency levitation?!?!? But I heard on Joe Rogan it's impossible without that kind of lost Atlantis ancient technology.
@mattstroker3742
2 күн бұрын
Don't worry about it. Joe Rogan or Roger Penrose; whether simple or complex, you're too dim to understand it either way 🤣🤷
@camacdonnell1
10 ай бұрын
If I've learned anything from historians it's "if we can think of it, they thought of it" a bit of a rule 34 for history.
@CardGamesTV1
7 ай бұрын
Facts
@mdsssssssss
6 ай бұрын
you’re right but did you have to phrase it like that
@walsakaluk1584
2 ай бұрын
My mum used to move furniture around the house in a similar manner to this. Walking machines, blocks and beams into place was dad's department. People do this. I was taught. This is an excellent bit of preserved and demonstrated historical practice.❤
@Ruskilaxi
10 ай бұрын
can someone send this to Joe Rogan?
@JR113FTW
Жыл бұрын
I hope you get rewarded and not punished from exposing a lot of the people claiming to be figuring out the mysteries of the pyramid and other man made treasures.
@samwillard5688
Ай бұрын
This is why that old Greek said "With a long enough lever, you can move the world".
@gamlinos
4 ай бұрын
Thankyou Mr. Wallington.
@kirkstickney7394
22 күн бұрын
Thank God OSHA wasn’t made aware of this project, let alone the local zoning commission….😳😳😳Those guys play hardball!!!
@marvinmartin4692
3 ай бұрын
If this were done in winter a little snow or ice would make things slide even easier!
@donaldpaterson5827
2 ай бұрын
Great work Wally.
@stonedog5547
9 күн бұрын
To those who say "Ah, but you're doing it all on a concrete slab, it won't work on sand" First of all, what do you think the floor of a stone quarry is made of? More stone And the Pyramids are built on a stone platform, which I think is directly onto bedrock.
@marvinmartin4692
3 ай бұрын
This man should be teaching at a college! Screw the degree!
@bobsekret9161
Жыл бұрын
very good video! I hope there will be more movies like this, it's something that interests me. There was a similar series on Polish youtube, but these things are amazing too! Ps. I found you after a video on ig
@vickikgibson9470
28 күн бұрын
It has always been said, to do anything, keep it simple! That's all you need to move even multi-ton blocks. Physics always does the job if you know how to use it:) Awesome job, and yeah, you can build or move anything without motors or tons of people...just like the guy who built the petrified coral home, he was all alone and this is the proof it can be done!
@PicaDelphon
2 ай бұрын
Very Well Done, and it Simple Leverage to Move Heavy Objects....I Want to see More...!!!!...
@fatalberti
2 ай бұрын
“well yeah. we been playin around with this stuff for years. cant believe you never heard about it.” in casual wear, new balance, and workin a tobacco pipe
@watchthe1369
Ай бұрын
Cribbing. What do cribs do? Rock back and forth with the right balance points. Saw and did that stuff on small scale for years. Most modern kids only think of it as wood that is as inert as a pallet. Toes jacks, prybars and fulcrums are ancient tools. The way this guy figured out pivots probably making those a similar ancient tool.
@IvoTichelaar
16 күн бұрын
This is so enjoyable to watch. He knows how it works and that it scales. I will tell you, my wife has a natural talent for this stuff. She'll have me lift something, but if it's too heavy for me she will find ways of getting the object where she wants in seconds. And not lose fingers.
@rodneyyoung8096
Ай бұрын
Obviously you're eating your Wheaties. You Keep pushing that around you will eventually be the strongest man around.
@No-One-of-Consequence
2 ай бұрын
Did your grandfather ever publish a book about all his recovered technology? What he did was just awesome, and I don't use the word "awesome" lightly.
@DavidWhy-y7i
Ай бұрын
Can it be done with minimal manpower? YES Would OSHA approve? No
@glennwall552
Ай бұрын
Thank you for teaching this generation the fucruim lever My grandfather taught me this " work smart " the tripod is another you can walk. N
@self-preservationsociety7057
3 ай бұрын
Yeah but this and yeah but that , now try it on sand in the middle of nowhere, Give the guy some credit, he doesn’t say he’s got all the answers . Awesome job Wally
@DanielMorris-cc8hx
2 ай бұрын
Was there Sand at the pyramids when they were built?
@raburu
Ай бұрын
This is intelligence!!!
@imetr8r
14 күн бұрын
Amazing work! No space alien technology needed nor giants!
@paddyneville1535
Ай бұрын
This guy has his point but he had his block on site how would he get it from a quorry from ten miles away. I think instead of putting rollers under the rocks they made a roller out of the rock itself wrapped it with a rope and pulled and the rock rolled then squared it on site and threw the rubble inside the pirimid só a combination of both.
@MikeHarland-m2g
Күн бұрын
Brilliant common sense, clear, imaginative thinking.
@jamesthomas7928
2 ай бұрын
I'll bet Wally's wife has stopped asking him whatcha thinking of Wally??
@afroman8750
13 күн бұрын
This guy's awesome! He really shows with the right knowledge and know how a man can do anything 👏
@PoppaFlagrant
Ай бұрын
Leverage and gravity are wonderful things when you truly understand how you can use them!!
@danielcoward
10 ай бұрын
this has to be the way it was built back then and the pyramids.
@coldeed
9 ай бұрын
Leverage is a hell of a drug. Looking like your doing a few superman moves lol 💪
@ekimmilc
22 күн бұрын
Now move it about a hundred miles and raise it a hundred feet and place it among others within a fraction of an inch.
@Werepie
11 ай бұрын
Crazy awesome. Give this guy a couple thousand skilled workers, a couple decades, and a budget. Might even be able to build a whole pyramid without needing any aliens to help! Oh wait, huh. Weird.
@uv77mc85
11 ай бұрын
What people don't take into account is the people who came to Britain 1000s of years ago were amazing people who travelled across the English channel and somehow survived in Britain which was just one huge freezing cold forest. It was such a harsh unforgiving environment that only the smartest and fittest survived. These people were more than capable of moving some rocks.
@edthegoomba
10 ай бұрын
How did you turn this into a British superiority thing? There have been great stone structures built all over the world by different civilizations at different times, get over yourself.
@Nobel-Galante
9 ай бұрын
@@edthegoombaYou need to get over yourself because you turned this into a "supremacy thing" he was just saying they are amazing people and out of these specific people only the smartest and fittest survived. Just like the rule of survival for every other group of people throughout the world he also didn't say anything about great stone structures anywhere in the world. He literally just showed admiration for these people and said they are more than capable of moving stones. I can't help but think you are trying to make this about supremacy because you are the racist racist here lol
@steve1750
3 ай бұрын
@edthegoomba stonehenge was mentioned, and being that is in England, that is why Britain was mentioned. Say hello to the other goomba's I hope they don't have a complex too.
@antasosam8486
2 ай бұрын
Nice. But forest is never cold freezing. It is very hospitable, warm and welcoming.
@samwillard5688
Ай бұрын
@@antasosam8486 Umm, tell that to a Canadian.
@mchaney9315
Ай бұрын
Interesting, but how do you move them 100s of miles over rough terrain?
@karenholmes2764
Ай бұрын
An engineering marvel for one man to be able to move such a huge weight. I also noticed that the wood under all that weight is a remarkable construction.
@karenholmes2764
Ай бұрын
It also makes sense that when they cut the blocks out of the outcroppings, they must have chosen the materials at a certain height and then cut out from under it and moved it out of the hill. They wouldn't have been able to lift it without it being already lifted.
@pedrokd5439
Ай бұрын
Good job wall
@rocco44223
Ай бұрын
He is truly amazing not too many people could figure out how to move those stones, but he sure did. Really answers a lot of questions. Stop giving make believe aliens all the credit.
@afroman8750
13 күн бұрын
Wonder if that was why there was those curious knobs on ancient stone construction
@ErgoCogita
2 ай бұрын
Give me a place to stand and a lever long enough and I will move the world. -Archimedes
@Megalochoerus
Жыл бұрын
Very very cool
@dandahermitseals5582
26 күн бұрын
Oh yeah. I see your plan. Back to Archenedis ( sp)
@gingerfish90
17 күн бұрын
What a fantastic video, great work Wally.
@jackspringer9283
2 ай бұрын
I was taught levreage at a young age, while 18 yrs old I was on a 65' seagoiing tug,we had 2 barges on the bow,passing thru Lake Okeechobee FL and while floating stationary in the locks, just my own 180 lbs was able to move the whole outfit sideways by leaning against the lock wall with a maintained force against the boat, just a matter of understanding and will power...
@PorchHonkey
Ай бұрын
Should've been a rigger instead of a carpenter.
@rossramsdell7584
2 ай бұрын
gee... 1 man... and not an ancient alien or super advanced civilization in sight
@philcourteney4328
2 ай бұрын
@3:40 everyone who doesn’t think humans can move these without construction machinery or aliens just had their heads explode with the cognitive dissonance 😂
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