Views : 11,072
Genre: Entertainment
Date of upload: Apr 29, 2024 ^^
Rating : 5 (0/930 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-14T07:01:32.604831Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
The ship and it's hull are already constructed in these photos. Looks like they were just refurbishing some features. Like most construction job sites in the 1800's, the main engineering has already been accomplished and it's usually just a few handyman touching up some paint and calling it construction.
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Check out the map online showing ALL of them oceanic cable lines.
Did anyone learn about these in school? How many discovery channel documentaries have you seen on them? Why don't they get the same media coverage as space x?
Probably because if the proper investigations into them came out, well, we all know "they'd" be in a heap of trouble.
Founded like everything else.
Blessings
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Your comment at 1:40 had me rolling. Over the weekend I was rereading Peter Murray's book on Italian Renaissance architecture, a book I've read a dozen times, but this time seeing it with new eyes. Not the eyes of a naive student, hungry for knowledge being spewed by the establishment, but the eyes of someone who's been enlightened and a particular passage struck me about st peters.
"When Bramante died he left no definite design to bind his designated successor, Raphael. Little had been built beyond the main piers and the setting out of the Great arches linking the piers"
Building the largest man made structure in all of modern human history and he didnt have any plans?!?! Like you said, once again we shouldn't question it because people were exceptionally intelligent and insightful in the 1500s. π
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You need to have a VERY POWERFUL power source, to push the signal through 2500 miles of cable. This can be achieved by a) having a power generation plant handy b) incorporating underwater repeaters to counter the signal degradation due to resistance and capacitance of the cable.
In other words - lol lol lol
But - his hat was taller than usual, by quite a bit. Awesome video.
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Always a fascinating journey with you β¦
β¦ on a bit of a side note: About 20 years ago in Los Angeles, the original subterranean copper power lines were swapped for aluminum ones. A Forman told me the project was almost entirely funded by the recycling of the Copper Alone. *mic drop
Food for thought.
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@soiledslacks792
3 weeks ago
I was manager of a large offshore windfarm in the UK. 2 cables 12miles from shore to site at a maximum depth of 30m, they faulted and blew up 5 times in 5 years. An absolute sh*tshow. So I find the official story very difficult to believe.
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