Thursday, February 26, 2015

Ancient vimana

This is about the Ancient Indian Vimana or the flying machine. A scientist named Dr. Talpade made and flew an unmanned aircraft using ancient Indian technology re-discovered from the ancient books by scholar - Pandit Shri Subbaraya Shastri and conveyed to Dr.Talpade, built and flew on Chowpati beach in Mumbai, India in 1895, excatly 8 years before Wright brothers invented Aeroplane. 

The technology used by ancient indians are depicted in early scripts and legendary books like "Ramayana" describing the power of flights. The sanskrit book written by Maharishi Bharadwaja depicts full construction of Vimana or the Flight, the metal construction, design, body, even construction of the furnace used to make the metal which inturn is used to make the body of the aircraft. It also gives good idea about the pilot, dresses, and even food. It clearly shows different kinds of aircrafts which existed. The book was translated to English by Mr. Josyer and then by Mr. David Hatcher Childress and was one of the books which has everything clearly mentioned in detail about the drawings, construction of an air craft which used Free energy or Anti Gravity to run. The speed was approx- 40,000 Km .hr. The un manned air craft flew about 1500ft from the ground and came back. The result of the experiment was Mr. Talpade was jailed. Shri Subbaraya shastri was jailed. Maharaja (King) who funded the experiment was threatened by the British people who were ruling the country to withdraw the efforts. The samples and references and remains of the air craft was sold to some German people by Dr.Talpade's relatives.
this is thing what I want to show

Rail Budget 2015

No New Trains Announced By Suresh Prabhu

Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu in his first Rail Budget announced a record investment plan of over Rs. 1 lakh crore in 2015-16 while sparing the passengers of a fare hike. The chartered accountant-turned politician also proposed a number of steps to increase passenger amenities.

Rail Budget 2015 stands out for its focus on the common man, putting speed, scale, service and safety, all on one track: PM Modi

NEW DELHI: An across-the-board increase in railway fares is unlikely to be announced in the Railway Budget on Thursday, with Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu set to rely on higher support from the main Budget, joint ventures with the private sector and soft financing from other countries to put the financially derailed organisation back on track.

Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/46362218.cms?