Thanks, but as with other evidence/observations flat earthers just ignores it and repeat the mantra “the horizon looks flat so the Earth must be flat”.
hahahaha! You must be kidding right? What is that x100 the mount Everest?!! There is no such big landmark on Earth. You are very funny. Zooming at a 1/100 arc of the perimeter of your Earth ball will not save your ball!! hahahahahaha!!. Please repeat the experiment to version 2.1 putting a more realistic landmark to scale. For example try to make with some plasticine a mountain 1 cm in length and half centimeter in height. Use camera with a small lens and point straight to horizon line on front of mountain (i.e. to ensure that mountain starts sinking down the horizon). To simulate realistically an observer on a airplane the camera lens center should not be above the ground NO more than 1.5 cm. Good luck.
hahahaha! You must be kidding right? What is that x100 the mount Everest?!! There is no such big landmark on Earth. You are very funny. Zooming at a 1/100 arc of the perimeter of your Earth ball will not save your ball!! hahahahahaha!!. Please repeat the experiment to version 2.1 putting a more realistic landmark to scale. For example try to make with some plasticine a mountain 1 cm in length and half centimeter in height. Use camera with a small lens and point straight to horizon line on front of mountain (i.e. to ensure that mountain starts sinking down the horizon). To simulate realistically an observer on a airplane the camera lens center should not be above the ground NO more than 1.5 cm. Good luck.
New video, now with a giant sphere radius=42m ua-cam.com/video/GDFEc81oP84/v-deo.html
awesome! I can't wait to find FE's scrambling on this one. you always do great work!
Thanks, but as with other evidence/observations flat earthers just ignores it and repeat the mantra “the horizon looks flat so the Earth must be flat”.
Well mathias, yes. they have a logic ciricut missing in their brain
hahahaha! You must be kidding right? What is that x100 the mount Everest?!! There is no such big landmark on Earth. You are very funny. Zooming at a 1/100 arc of the perimeter of your Earth ball will not save your ball!! hahahahahaha!!. Please repeat the experiment to version 2.1 putting a more realistic landmark to scale. For example try to make with some plasticine a mountain 1 cm in length and half centimeter in height. Use camera with a small lens and point straight to horizon line on front of mountain (i.e. to ensure that mountain starts sinking down the horizon). To simulate realistically an observer on a airplane the camera lens center should not be above the ground NO more than 1.5 cm. Good luck.
+Markoul11, No thoughts on my v3 video with the top of a sphere with radius=42m ua-cam.com/video/GDFEc81oP84/v-deo.html
hahahaha! You must be kidding right? What is that x100 the mount Everest?!! There is no such big landmark on Earth. You are very funny. Zooming at a 1/100 arc of the perimeter of your Earth ball will not save your ball!! hahahahahaha!!. Please repeat the experiment to version 2.1 putting a more realistic landmark to scale. For example try to make with some plasticine a mountain 1 cm in length and half centimeter in height. Use camera with a small lens and point straight to horizon line on front of mountain (i.e. to ensure that mountain starts sinking down the horizon). To simulate realistically an observer on a airplane the camera lens center should not be above the ground NO more than 1.5 cm. Good luck.
You mean something like I have done here with the top of a sphere with radius=42m ua-cam.com/video/GDFEc81oP84/v-deo.html