

Episode #085: The Upuaut Project
Feb 14, 2019
02:22:29
In this episode we do a deep-dive into German Engineer Rudolph Gantenbrink's exploration of the mysterious "air shafts" in the Great Pyramid, reading at length from his website where he meticulously records every detail of the project to use a robotic crawler to drive a camera up the shafts and inspect them up close, block by block, culminating in the discovery of the now infamous "secret door". So many interesting features were discovered by Gantenbrink and his "Upuaut" robot, most of which were so overshadowed by the "door" that these other details are rarely reported. We remedy that with this show. (All the pictures below come from Gantenbrink's website, www.cheops.org) Settling of the shaft blocks
"Dixon's Rod"
An illustration showing the partially completed shaft block, which the robot could not pass
Block assembly where one of the King's Chamber shaft ends on the exterior of the pyramid
Entering the "Mankiller" tunnel
Cleaning the access to exterior shaft point
The 100 year old wheeled "battering ram"
Installing the protective cover over an exterior shaft exit
Recessed niches in King's Chamber shaft. You can see the laser dots on the wall, inside the niches
Ventilator blower
Upuaut 2 entering a shaft
Lateral displacement of a shaft block
Static forces damaged the floor block of the shaft, making a giant "tank trap" step up to the next block
The infamous "door"
Close-up of the copper rods, with circular "seals" discoloration
Graphic showing shaft block arrangement
Shaft block assembly
Shaft block assembly, showing how the builders changed block sizes to keep the assembly from sliding down into the chambers
Strange vertical shaft seam(it looks tilted from the robot's perspective)
Dixon's "hook"
Black mark on the shaft wall, with horizontal chisel marks across it
Double vertical black mark with chisel marks
Object with two holes in it, beneath Dixon's Rod
Wooden square rod trapped beneath Dixon's Rod
Dixon's Rod curving to the right where it is jammed against the wall. To the left is the square rod, with a mysterious boxy shape barely visible at the far end of it
Very rough block surfaces
Horizontal "Scratch lines" along the block wall, just above floor level
Remnants of mortar glue stuck to shaft wall
More glue in a different area
Floor groove
A second floor groove
Graphic depicting saw being used to clean the sides of casing stones
Groove beneath casing stone seam
Broken piece of copper rod from the "door"
Fine Limestone natural veins visible in cieling
Remnants of gypsum on copper rod
Bottom right corner of the "door"