A famous Flat Earther spent a staggering $20,000 on a DIY experiment that accidentally proved the planet is round. 

Bob Knodel was in the middle of filming for a Netflix documentary titled Behind the Curve when he realised his pricy mistake. 

Seeking to disprove the mass of research led by NASA experts, he explained the particulars of the DIY experiment using a laser gyroscope.

The test involved using a camera to film through two holes, with a person standing on the other side and shining a torch back at the camera. 

Mr Knodel professed that if the light can be seen with a camera, the holes in the fence and the torch all at equal differences above the ground, then he could draw a positive conclusion that the Earth is flat. 

Flat Earther Bob Knodel spent a shocking $20,000 on an experiment that accidentally proved the Earth is round

Flat Earther Bob Knodel spent a shocking $20,000 on an experiment that accidentally proved the Earth is round

Flat Earther Bob Knodel spent a shocking $20,000 on an experiment that accidentally proved the Earth is round

The test involved using a camera to film through two holes, with a person standing on the other side and shining a torch back at the camera

The test involved using a camera to film through two holes, with a person standing on the other side and shining a torch back at the camera

The test involved using a camera to film through two holes, with a person standing on the other side and shining a torch back at the camera

Mr Knodel claimed that if the light can be seen with a camera, the holes in the fence and the torch all at equal differences above the ground, then he could draw a positive conclusion that the Earth is flat

Mr Knodel claimed that if the light can be seen with a camera, the holes in the fence and the torch all at equal differences above the ground, then he could draw a positive conclusion that the Earth is flat

Mr Knodel claimed that if the light can be seen with a camera, the holes in the fence and the torch all at equal differences above the ground, then he could draw a positive conclusion that the Earth is flat

Yet, in a humorous and expensive turn of events, no light could be seen, causing Mr Knodel to mutter an awkward ‘interesting’ after the mistake.  

Speaking on his YouTube channel, Mr Knodel has since opened up about the experiment and what it means for flat Earthers across the globe. 

‘What we found is, when we turned on that gyroscope we found that we were picking up a drift. A 15 degree per hour drift,’ he said. 

‘Now, obviously we were taken aback by that,’ before admitting the results were ‘kind of a problem’.

‘We obviously were not willing to accept that, and so we started looking for ways to disprove it was actually registering the motion of the Earth,’ he added.  

According to a report by Unilad, one Instagram user claimed: ‘I bet he still won’t accept it.’

Mr Knodel was in the middle of filming for a Netflix documentary titled Behind the Curve when he realised his pricy mistake

Mr Knodel was in the middle of filming for a Netflix documentary titled Behind the Curve when he realised his pricy mistake

Mr Knodel was in the middle of filming for a Netflix documentary titled Behind the Curve when he realised his pricy mistake

Mr Knodel has since opened up about the experiment and what it means for flat Earthers across the globe

Mr Knodel has since opened up about the experiment and what it means for flat Earthers across the globe

Mr Knodel has since opened up about the experiment and what it means for flat Earthers across the globe

Mr Knodel still maintains that he thinks the Earth is flat, despite his failed experiment

Mr Knodel still maintains that he thinks the Earth is flat, despite his failed experiment

Mr Knodel still maintains that he thinks the Earth is flat, despite his failed experiment 

Another said: ‘Something oddly satisfying about watching a simple opinion dissolve in the face of non-rigorous methods lol.’

The failed experiment has since gone viral on Reddit, with people noticing that even after the experiment, Mr Knodel kept using ‘mental gymnastics’ to claim his conspiracy theory was still correct.  

One person wrote: ‘I’ve seen that clip many times but have yet to see his explanation as to how that happened.’ 

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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