Why does the government hide UFO's?

Discussion in 'UFOs, Ghosts and Monsters' started by darksidZz, Apr 19, 2016.

  1. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,959
    Still waiting for that evidence.
     
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  3. river

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    . Interestingly though, manufacturers note that the most common applications for the 2000 series Aluminum alloys are aerospace, military vehicles and rocket fins.
     
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  5. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,959
    Except that it's shaped like an excavator tooth.

    Better yet:

    My fillings are gold.
    Interestingly, gold is often used in royal jewellery.
    Therefore I am probably royalty.
     
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  7. river

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    Stupid respose
     
  8. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,959
    Precisely. So you do get what dumb logic that is.


    Look. The fun's over. You made a silly, brash claim, and now you realize you have nothing to back it up. You have no books full of evidence that the rest of us have simply overlooked. You're talking through your hat. We know it; you know it.

    Let's just move on, and hopefully you won't folow MR into the void for making outlandish claims.
     
  9. river

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    17,307
    Again

    . Interestingly though, manufacturers note that the most common applications for the 2000 series Aluminum alloys are aerospace, military vehicles and rocket fins.
     
  10. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    18,959
    My fillings are gold.
    Interestingly, gold is often used in royal jewellery.
    Therefore I am probably royalty.
     
  11. river

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    17,307
    Your trolling dave
     
  12. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    Exactly.
    But it's not what you stated in posts 707 & 711...
    Except that, due to stress corrosion cracking, they're now largely replaced in aerospace uses by the 7000 series of alu alloys.
     
  13. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    18,959
    I am posing an analogy to show the gaping flaw in your implication.

    The ocean has deuterium.
    So do atomic bombs.
    Does this imply a secret mystery that the ocean is an atomic bomb?
    It's silly.

    How many times are you going to post the same thing?
     
  14. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    So are you.
    Re posts 707, 711 and 715.
    You claim a mystery yet, apparently, you already knew it's not.
     
  15. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    18,959
    To reiterate:
     
  16. river

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    17,307
    So be it . One can change their mind with the evidence .

    Your point ?

    The thing is , is that this 2000 series was never used for excavator teeth .
     
  17. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,959
    Good. Then we can put to rest the claims you've been making for over 100 posts:
     
  18. river

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    17,307
    Irrelevent to this discussion .

    Shall we move on .
     
  19. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    That - as you keep telling others - you're behind the times.

    I think you're making that up.
    You last link states quite clearly that "Aluminum (as well as Brass, Stainless Steel, Iron, Zinc Alloy or Polyurethane) EBT can be purchased on-line from Global Sources in China, complete with a 30 day delivery schedule".
     
  20. river

    Messages:
    17,307
    river said:
    Again

    . Interestingly though, manufacturers note that the most common applications for the 2000 series Aluminum alloys are aerospace, military vehicles and rocket fins.
     
  21. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    18,959
    So much for moving on, eh?

    OK, why is that interesting to you?
     
  22. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    19,252
    And yet...
    You appear to have not done so.
    What I do find fascinating is that you didn't (apparently) bother looking for the contrary viewpoint until I'd pointed out that there was one: IOW you took the initial claim at face value so far as can be seen.

    Yes, you claimed that.
    Yet 2000 series alu (usually referred to as duralimin) is OLD aerospace tech (starting 1916).
    And even if "most common applications" covers aerospace that says nothing about other applications.
    So I say again that your (unsupported) claim "2000 series was never used for excavator teeth" appears to be entirely fabricated by you.
     
  23. river

    Messages:
    17,307
    Read the whole article :


    Sunday, December 28, 2014

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    There are two holes that intersect and two 'horns' at the flat end of the wedge that would either lock or articulate with some further piece. It is slightly over 8 inches in its largest dimension. One wedge face and two sides show signs of either tool marks or wear. According to postings, the Wedge was donated to the Museum of the History of Transylvania. The story was later broken in 1995. RUFOR, a Romanian UFO magazine, published a piece after Florian Gheorghita rediscovered the wedge. It was tested at the "Archeological Institute of Cluj-Napoca" and a Swiss lab. Gheorghita further asked a series of professionals to examine the artifact, and claims that an aeronautical engineer identified the wedge as a piece of landing gear on a VTOL-type (Vertical Take-Off and Landing) craft.

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    The metallurgical tests on the wedge all demonstrated the same elemental makeup:
    • 89 percent aluminum,
    • 6.2 percent copper,
    • 2.84 percent silicon,
    • 1.81 percent zinc,
    • 0.41 percent lead,
    • 0.33 percent tin,
    • 0.2 percent zirconium,
    • 0.11 percent cadmium,
    • 0.0024 percent nickel,
    • 0.0023 percent cobalt,
    • 0.0003 percent bismuth,
    • trace of galium.
    None of these elements are rare to the earth, and all (except gallium, which is almost impossible to completely remove from aluminum) are used in creating a near-infinite variety of aluminum alloys. It is the thickness of the oxidation, and primarily the depth at which the wedge was found "with Mastodon bones", which make things interesting. If earlier cultures could not make Aluminum, who did?

    The first question, the most important question, must be asked: is this alloy found on earth? And what are its characteristics? The primary three elements of the Wedge are Aluminum, Copper, Silicon (Al-Cu-Si) and while alloys of Aluminum are myriad, Al-Cu-Si alloys are the most popular in use for casting where high strength is required. Bismuth, lead and cadmium are added to increase machinability.

    This alloy is clearly part of the 2000 series of Aluminum, where copper adds higher strength, and silicon increases toughness and imparts increased integrity to the casting process where complex parts are involved. When heat-treated, this alloy can exceed the toughness of mild steel. Interestingly though, manufacturers note that the most common applications for the 2000 series Aluminum alloys are aerospace, military vehicles and rocket fins.

    Copper in aluminum alloy tends to segregate to grain boundaries, causing local galvanic potentials and increased pitting. In other words, Al-Cu-Si tends to have the lowest corrosion resistance of any Aluminum alloy - meaning that the layer of corrosion may not give an accurate estimate of age.

    The facts, as they stand, are used to assert that Aliens or Time Travellers (or Time Travelling Aliens, perhaps in a blue box) had somehow left a piece of their craft behind in Romania. Because not only was the Aluminum an Out Of Place Artifact ("OOPART") by virtue of the material pre-dating its known manufacture on earth - but said to be part of a flying craft by an engineer. To assess these assertions, a little more needs to be said about Aluminum.

    Aluminum itself is a somewhat ironic element (especially since it is lucky atomic number 13) - in that it is the most abundant metal in the earth's crust and third most abundant element after oxygen and silicon, yet it was not discovered and named as an element until 1761. Aluminum was first produced in 1825 and not in mass quantities until 1886 using the Hall–Héroult process of electrolysing a molten cryolite bath. Up until this point, Aluminum was worth more than gold due to the expense of the process and materials needed. Even in present day, the cost of Aluminum is largely due to the huge amount of energy required to first smelt bauxite and then electrolyse the resulting Aloxite at 1000 Degrees C. It is estimated that 8% of the United States annual energy consumption is used for the production of Aluminum. The point here is simple - Aluminum is very hard to isolate. (And you should always recycle your aluminum cans!). Previous to 1825, metallic Aluminum effectively did not exist. It was not simply forgotten like the formula for concrete or Damascus steel - it never was.

    But could ancient cultures have found a way to produce Aluminum, as they had steel? Or are there any naturally occurring pure forms of Aluminum that could be taken advantage of, as there are native forms of gold, silver, or copper? (With the exception of Rubies, Sapphires, and Corundum which are all forms of Aluminum Oxide)

    The first question is the easiest to answer - there are no other verified ancient artifacts made of metallic aluminum, whether coins, crowns, or hammers. But as far as the second question goes, there are peer reviewed papers that report "native aluminum" being found in exotic locals - which means that Aluminum is now accepted by geologists as a mineral. They are always associated with extreme, oxygen free environments such as ocean floor cold seeps or volcanic action. These aluminum flakes are always minuscule (2 mm x 2 mm by .5 mm, for example) and do not add up to a sizeable amount of aluminium - certainly, if 5 lbs of this metal was recovered 11,000 years ago, it would not have been made into a hammer - it would be the crown of crowns. Even 150 years ago, Aluminum had a higher value than platinum or gold.

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    Excavator Bucket Teeth


    So, Aluminum occurs naturally on earth. Ancient cultures could not isolate it. Does this leave the Alien/ Time Traveller hypothesis as the most likely scenario? The shape of the wedge and holes are unremarkable and certainly not "Alien". And the estimated age of the artifact is in doubt, because of the susceptibility of this particular alloy to corrosion. Let's assume that the artifact was found at the bottom of the excavation, and not simply planted by hoaxers. How did it get there? It is the location that the Wedge was found in that provides the last clue. Is there anything earthly that high-strength aluminum is used for; created in a similar shape; and could be found at the bottom of an excavation - no matter how deep.

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    Excavator Bucket Teeth and adapter pieces.


    Spending some time on a Google image search (and my own experience finding similar "artifacts" in the course of my job at construction sites) a solution becomes apparent. Excavator Bucket Teeth (EBT) bare a striking resemblance to the Wedge of Aiud. They are used to both protect the expensive digging bucket from damage, and increase the efficiency of the operation. Many look very similar, although none match exactly the Wedge's profile, which isn't unusual since technology has advanced forty years since the wedge was found. Generally they are made of carbon steel, which makes them an unlikely answer to this puzzle. Unless they are also made of Aluminum. And are they?

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    Aluminum (as well as Brass, Stainless Steel, Iron, Zinc Alloy or Polyurethane) EBT can be purchased on-line from Global Sources in China, complete with a 30 day delivery schedule. They are used to reduce the risk of explosion and fire when digging in volatile environments - such as coal mines, swamps, land fills or around inflammable gases or vapours. And while the total number of volatile environments in Romania cannot be estimated - coal mining itself has been going on in Romania for some time. Many mines have been shut down in recent years due to the fall of Communism and joining the European Union (EU). So is it far fetched to suggest that an excavator - that had been used in coal mining or the transfer of coal - was used in excavating the sand in this riverbank/ sandpit? And of all likely scenarios, did the Aluminum wedge/ tooth simply fall off of the excavator bucket that was digging the hole? And then someone unfamiliar with the maintenance of the excavator found it in the sand.
     

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