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god darn that video was like entirely fluff

tldw: the theory is that they used normal ramps to build the bottom portion of the pyramid, but a series of internal ramps/channels to carry stone blocks up to the upper courses.

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A third of the video was an Assassin's Creed ad :marseyxd:

You may enjoy Practical engineering more

He's a civil engineer so his channel mostly focuses on infrastructure but occasionally he enters explores topics.

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thx bb this video is much more interesting

:#marseythebuilder:

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@C333 I have a question, in the US the piles are all pre fabricated? Or are there some companies which still work with "in situ" made piles?

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:#marseyshrug:

I'm site/utilities not a structural.

Most of my work is grading design and stormwater drainage

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/17231395069519083.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/1723139507051636.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17231395072551548.webp

Yes, but weren't you guys taught about general foundation types on college? Or paid a visit to some construction site where they were being laid?

The first pic is called "estaca escavada". The prefabs are called "estacas pre-moldadas".

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Yes, but weren't you guys taught about general :marseyjamesironwood: foundation :marseyeff: types on college?

The basic :marseysymbol: physics :marseyschrodinger: behind :marseynotes2: it in geotech and reinforced concrete :marseybarrier: design courses, but nothing on manufacturing. We don't really :marseythinkorino2: use much besides slabs here because it's all bedrock here and where :marseydrama: I went to college. I also didn't take any bridge :marseyetika: or structural courses for my electives where :marseydrama: they may go in depth on it.

Or paid a visit to some construction :marseykilldozerhappy: site where :marseydrama: they were being placed?

Nope all bedrock here too expensive for anything :marseycoleporter: to be profitable. I work subdivisions so the slab is cheapest so developers use them. Might see it with bridges/skyscrapers but I don't design them

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Nope all bedrock here too expensive for anything :marseycoleporter: to be profitable

Oh, makes sense

I also didn't take any bridge :marseyetika: or structural courses for my electives where :marseydrama: they may go in depth on it.

Structural and bridges are pure pain :marseycry: I struggled with those

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17231406306132307.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17231406329625576.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17231406318660433.webp

I have to check my textbook to make sense of it and it's still hard because they're so many formulas and I'm forgetting most of them.

CA 25, 50 and 60 are steel standards in Brazil for reinforcement.

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Structural and bridges are pure pain

I avoided structural like a plague :marseymask: for that reason. If I wanted hard math 24/7 I'd be a mechanical

:#marseycool:

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