That sound like an interesting experiment, i could dismiss the whole "things in the horizon disappear because of perspective" idea. But you should use the same kind of light for the mountain and in shore.
Experiments like this are hard to find on the web because the round earth is an accepted true, imagine a video on you tube titled "experiment that proofs the earth is round" everyone would call it stupid, or at least unnecessary.
Its not a 'strange experiment' - its something that thousands upon thousands of people have observed over hundreds of years.
To make it even weirder, the lookout in the top of the mast ( crows nest ), can often see the shore light while those on deck, cannot.
This is why you see the masts of a sailing ship long before the hull when observing a ship approaching port to those on land.
There are no flat earth navigators, civil engineers, aeroplane route planners, and people who actually have to work with the real world every day. They don't have the luxury of messing with myth and legend.
Also, some of the worlds long bridges in Japan, over 5 kilometres long, have to compensate for the curve of the earth in their construction calculations. Lasers produce totally straight beams for over 15 kilometres.