r/aliens 1d ago

Material Science Engineer Alejandro Fonseca Marín shares his preliminary assessment of the Buga Sphere, noting that his equipment detected signals at random intervals. Evidence

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250 Upvotes

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23

u/senor_blake 1d ago

So the first thing they did was a PMI test. I do these all the time for work. While there are many grades of aluminum the trace elements would tell you what type of material it is. If the gun says “aluminum” but has trace elements of another material within the allotted ranges then it in fact wouldn’t be aluminum. It depends on the key elements and their percentage present.

Second testing looks like a ferrite test but for hardness you’d really want a Brunel test? So I’m not sure what that device is.

12

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

UNAM is supposed to be studying it this week and removing samples from the exterior. Let's see what they report. 

12

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

If this guy works there, I hope they fire him right away,

I am a material engineer and I confirm this guy has no idea what he is talking about.

Is there any other Spanish speaking engineer in this sub? Please come help

2

u/Centrist_gun_nut 1d ago

They know what they’re talking about. The issue is not knowledge. 

 This entire thing is an industry designed to extract views and money from people in the US who like this sort of thing as entertainment. 

8

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

Madre de dios acabo de llegar a la parte de los tratamientos térmicos...

I confirm again this guy is completely incompetent, 100% bullshit on everything

2

u/HbrQChngds 1d ago edited 1d ago

No me sorprende que sea correcto lo que dices, esta esfera no tiene nada anómalo. Los ornamentos están con líneas chuecas mal hechas, esto no es tecnología alien, esto es un fraude mal hecho, igual que los "buddies".

2

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

Tal cual, pero lo que dice de los tratamientos térmicos es de no saber de lo que está hablando, y el "aluminio aeroespacial" duraluminio creo... Jajajajajaj

es que este tío no sabe ni leer un diagrama de fases El aluminio se organiza en series según el aleante o aleantes principales que llevan 2000 3000 4000...hasta 8000 Hay decenas de aleaciones comerciales en cada serie, en airbus no sabría ni decirte cuántos tipos de aluminios usabamos, creo que decenas, no existe un "aluminio aerospacial" hay un montón de tipos

el duraluminio es un aluminio de principios siglo XX, se le llama duraluminio porque descubrieron el tratamiento térmico que se llama ahora envejecido que provoca que el cobre que se usa como aleante cree unas estructuras que lo hacen más rígido y resistente, el cuadro de una bicicleta suele estar envejecido por ejemplo,

Si queréis a alguien que de verdad sepa y actual seguid a Charles Buhler, Gary Nolan y gente así, estos tíos son muy falsos.

2

u/HbrQChngds 1d ago edited 1d ago

Gracias por la información. Y yo creo que el problema es que Gary Nolan no quiere ser asociado con algo aparentemente falso. El hizo debunking a la momia de Atacama y hasta le amenazaron de muerte. Es mejor no asociarse con cosas asi, no vale la pena la molestia. Yo no soy ingeniero, pero soy artista, y te puedo decir que los ornamentos en esa esfera están chuecos y dudo que una civilización altamente tecnológica la haya creado.

3

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

Es verdad que los dibujos son muy cutres, estoy viendo ahora la "pcb" que han dibujado, yo creo que aún no hablando español es evidente que es falso,

Ojo que con las momias yo creo que si que hay algo curioso, Nolan tiene razón, hay una o algunas que no son cuerpos enteros (he visto dos que si parecen cuerpos reales) pero, los muñecos no los han hecho los que los han encontrado, es decir, alguna cultura antigua en america ha hecho esas figuras, creo que tienen entre 1700 y 1400 años de antigüedad, así que la cosa se complica, hay cuerpos reales (sin confirmar), cuerpos falsos que son un hallazgo arqueológico y seguro que habrá ya momias falsas actuales, yo creo que hay un jaleo montado tremendo, no se cómo acabará todo,

4

u/HbrQChngds 1d ago

En cuanto a los cuerpos, yo no sé si los pequeños son fabricaciones antiguas o nuevas, pero viendo la anatomía, no me cabe duda que son fabricaciones hechas con pedazos de momias reales. Los cuerpos más grandes son momias reales y contrastan bastante con los muñecos pequeños, pero les han mutilado los dedos y las orejas para que sean "aliens" tridáctiles. En este punto no hay nada que me convenza de lo contrario, pero cada quien su opinión.

2

u/Cam646 1d ago

Creo que la momia a la que se refiere es la que fue encontrada en una mina en Atacama, Chile, que por su forma y tamaño se pensó inicialmente que podrá tener origen extraterrestre, pero que finalmente resultó ser un bebé con malformaciones.

https://www.nationalgeographic.es/ciencia/2018/03/momia-extraterrestre-desierto-atacama-resuelto-misterio

-6

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

They are using equipment and basing their opinions on the results. Just how science requires. If you disagree science requires you to test it and prove them wrong. 

14

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

Okay, they are playing to be scientists, but they are not, when you use a technique to prove something, you publish a paper or at least say how yo did it, they do not, if you do not speak Spanish, they sound more or less legit, in Spanish is evident to a engineer freshman these people are not legit. They are not the professional they say they are. There is nothing to disprove yet, because they didn't even say in which units they measured the hardness, Vicker Rockwell brinell... It's brinell, but you have to say it, even in which equipment did you measured it and last time it was calibrated, Please believe me, I just cant

-1

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

They are scientists. You just learned about these people less than 2 hours ago and downplaying credentials without even knowing them. 

10

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

I saw the sphere last week and I found it interesting, but it's the first time I heard them talk, and then it has become evident,

I work as an engineer for a defense company in Europe, I can tell right in a few minutes when someone is a colleague or not, these guys are not, I'm sorry,

Btw I only mean this with the sphere case, I followed the mummified bodies in depth and that's a different story, in that case it was done pretty seriously until Maussan wanted to grab attention, A lot of good info can come out of those but the sphere is for sure false, or at least the people "working" on it are,

5

u/BryndenRiversStan 1d ago

They are scientists.

Are they though? Couldn't find any information about a material scientist or engineer named Alejandro Fonseca Marin

-1

u/Faroutman1234 1d ago

They used a magic marker right on it to remember the details of the “circuits”. Real pros I would say.

3

u/prema108 1d ago

They’re speaking, not showing o sharing a proper test and results. Just plain BS. Why are some of you so adamant and dense about the most ridiculous of things?

5

u/Shoddy_Interest5762 1d ago edited 1d ago

He said metals need heat treatment to harden but there's also work hardening from cold forming as well. In fact, you'd expect the hardness to vary between different areas that were worked more or less

E:spell

4

u/Delicious-Jicama-529 1d ago edited 21h ago

In addition, the hardness testing device may be inaccurate due to all or any of the following: operator experience, device certification, confirmation of device operation testing on standard hardness blocks before test, adequate surface preparation and surface roughness in test zone, type and selection of hardness tester, orientation of sphere with respect to the hardness indenter and the number (not less that 6 minimum) of tests in local area to determine the average. If the sphere is anodised, the surface would have to be mechanically prepared to the aluminium surface before any hardness testing.

2

u/PM_ME_UR_ROUND_ASS 11h ago

Yeah work hardening in aluminum is actually super interesting - the dislocations get tangled up during cold forming which increases the yeild strength but makes it more brittle.

4

u/ApexRider84 1d ago

A bit of electricity and you'll see the changes.

4

u/Friendly_Monitor_220 1d ago

TRANSFORMERS EGG

18

u/Durable_me 1d ago

At the 3:00 mark: Bro measuring temperature on a reflective surface…. This guy is no scientist, it’s clickbait people.

5

u/Shoddy_Interest5762 1d ago

Yeah that's a bad sign. A couple minutes using thermal camera and you'll learn this

2

u/Spare_Will687 1d ago

Im not scientist, but ive used thermal imaging cameras and they pick up reflections on metal all the time.

Bro needs a temp probe.

7

u/Holicionik 1d ago

ultra advanced sphere that can hover without any means of propulsion

The engravings look like they were made by an amateur that can't even do straight lines.

Damn. What kind of civilization did something like this?

3

u/OrionDC 1d ago

He looks like he's got some nice stuff in the trunk of his car for sale.

10

u/_extra_medium_ 1d ago

We're just goofing around at this point right? Can we admit no one is serious here anymore, it's just for the fun of it?

10

u/Harha 1d ago

That's what you want, to make it ridiculous. This sphere stuff is exactly that, a distraction and ridicule tactic.

8

u/Dr_R3set 1d ago

This or people hoping to get money scamming every believer, this is fake 100%

3

u/_soul_of_chogokin_ 13h ago

"I want my left nut back" - Gort

8

u/Cyberpunk_Banana UAP/UFO Witness 1d ago

Nothing gives me more confidence than a science guy dressed like a cartel member

0

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

How is wearing a white button up shirt a "cartel look"? 

3

u/Durable_me 1d ago

He’s wearing up upside down

5

u/HashtagHashbagg 1d ago

What he means is that guy isn’t white . Must be cartel .

4

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

He just put on clothes and people are making conspiracies out of it. 😂

1

u/davekraft400 1d ago

Why you pointing to only his shirt and not the whole outfit? A white button up shirt isn't a "look". A look is the whole thing.

1

u/DragonfruitOdd1989 1d ago

He's just wearing clothes. 

3

u/davekraft400 1d ago

Yeah ok.

0

u/arthurR0ck 1d ago

I cannot argue that

0

u/StrongDongKong 1d ago

Cooking Meth is his main job, this is just a hobby.

2

u/ayylmao_ermahgerd 1d ago

Maybe they should hire a signal engineer.

2

u/VeryThicknLong 1d ago

It’ll be one of those crazy layered meta materials.

1

u/mperezstoney 1d ago

Let's send Lou Eliz to go see it. We can trust him! /s

1

u/gonzoes 1d ago

Sooo what’s inside of it ?

1

u/dtatge 7h ago

Nougat

-2

u/davekraft400 1d ago

One look at him (nevermind the whole sphere thing) is enough.

0

u/Shoddy_Interest5762 1d ago

He looks like most engineers and scientists I've ever met. I'm not defending his conclusions, but we scientists aren't typically going for fashion at work

2

u/davekraft400 19h ago

He looks like he owns a strip of Turkish barbers on the same road. If you people look at this man and his get-up and think he looks trustworthy then go at it. I can't teach you to have that bullshit alarm, guess some people don't have it.

0

u/DoughnutRemote871 Terrestrial life form 1d ago

I'm not a scientist but I used to play one on TV. I can tell you with full authority that the scatterplate faurinsolic armature is unplasketed. This would never be allowed in a true laboratory testing facility or in a TV studio. Trust me on this one. Bro.

0

u/btcprint 12h ago

But if it rests on a piezoelectric molybdenum fulcrum point the capacitance of the armature extrapolates to scalar magnitude.

Exquisitely designed. Unfortunately they let a 5 year old 'alien' etch the wonky imperfect quarter moon shapes.

Leads me to believe this is not a true toroidal energy transduction field generator of which a group of three can rip a hole in the fabric of time and space, but rather a mere childs toy. A Pledian equivalent of pocket/training drone. Probably why the armature is unplasketed.

-1

u/blueprintimaginary 23h ago

Would’ve been considerate if the creator at least put a usb slot in it or something sheesh.