Ok Rab, I meant the wiki, I made a mistake, you got me.
Sorry for being so critical.
Of course even with that "wonderfully imaginative" explanation in "the Wiki" lunar eclipses on the flat earth would be completely impossible.
And no flat earther seems able to offer any meaningful explanation.
Maybe you should review this old thread
what's the new answer for the lunar eclipse?, you were a part of it.
It starts getting interesting after this post
You're aware that the "Saros" cycle (properly the "Chaldean" cycle) was the work of flat earthers, are you not? 
while I did know then that the Chaldeans and the Babylonians were "flat earthers" alright.
But what I did not know then was that there is a big difference between their "cosmology" and these
neo Flatists we have now.
The Chaldeans and the Babylonians had a locally flat earth with the celestial objects rotating about the earth, not
circling above - big difference!
The Babylonian's sun rose from and set into "the underworld",
but from the perspective of observers on earth, it looked like what we observe on the Globe.
That explains how the Babylonians were excellent astronomers, though their purpose was more akin to what we would call "astrology".
So Ski's claim "that the 'Saros' cycle (properly the 'Chaldean' cycle) was the work of flat earthers" is extremely significant, and in my opinion at least, is really support for the Globe model, where the celestial objects really do (from our perspective) rise from below and set below the horizon.
I don't know if you remember "Daddy" and his thread
Ultimate Flat Earth Model in design. « on: March 01, 2017, 09:52:33 AM »Most just ridiculed him, but I believe he was saying that
the earth looks locally flat, so we could
almost say it is "piecewise flat".
Sorry, tl;dr again!