Look, JS, you’re simply wrong about this.
One of the most desirable, most clever, most elegant thing that any designer can do is to get a single component to serve multiple function, JS.
You read, “A function of the hat truss was to support the antenna”, and read it as “THE ONLY function of the hat truss was to support the antenna.”
It’s just that simple.
You can fess up to that … or you can keep digging your hole deeper & deeper.
The hallmark of someone who is quoting something with little depth of understanding.
More “I’m just quoting & don’t really understand with any depth.”
Oh, really...??
I am twisting which explanation? Glanz’ explanation?
Well, here is the section (in its entirety) which I excerpted in my previous post.
Please compare this verbatim excerpt to the excerpt I posted earlier & tell me what I “twisted”.
Then, perhaps, you can tell me how I am “twisting” the following verbatim excerpts from the NIST Report.
If you’re still not clear on why it is a good idea to interconnect the core & external column, perhaps this quote will provide you with a little insight.
Are you going to write to the NIST structural engineers, with your quote excerpt, and tell them “WRONG. It doesn’t ‘interconnect the exterior walls to the core’. And it doesn’t ‘distribute the wind loads between the core & exterior walls’. It ONLY supports the antenna. Because ... that's how I read THIS QUOTE.!”
__
Thanks for providing a reference which mentions the phrase “hat truss” one time, and says not one word about its function.
Time to stop digging, JS.
Your comment about my "faking it" is both wrong & uncalled for.
And you know it.
You jumped the shark with what you thought was an opportunity to get a little payback for some of the times that I've been hard on you.
You jumped at the wrong time, guy.
You can step back, act like an adult, and rescind your comments.
Or not.
Whichever path you choose will have an impact on both how people view your response when you've been shown to be wrong about some trivial topic.
And it'll have an impact on our future interactions.
Your choice.
One of the most desirable, most clever, most elegant thing that any designer can do is to get a single component to serve multiple function, JS.
You read, “A function of the hat truss was to support the antenna”, and read it as “THE ONLY function of the hat truss was to support the antenna.”
It’s just that simple.
You can fess up to that … or you can keep digging your hole deeper & deeper.
I am not going to argue with you...
The hallmark of someone who is quoting something with little depth of understanding.
You can take this up with Roberston, Skilling and Tomasetti. I am sure they would appreciate your wisdom. This is not MY assertion... I am reporting what I have read about the hat truss by the designers/engineers.
More “I’m just quoting & don’t really understand with any depth.”
you are twisting the explanation
Oh, really...??
I am twisting which explanation? Glanz’ explanation?
Well, here is the section (in its entirety) which I excerpted in my previous post.
City In The Sky_Glanz said:Even the dampers would not be enough. Robertson and John Skilling had to go to Yamasaki and tell him that all of the experimental data they had been collecting indicated that the towers would still sway too much unless three separate structural modifications were carried out. Two of them would have an enormous impact on the architectural design of the building, Robertson said, before explaining that he would have to widen Yamasaki’s pinstripe columns slightly to make them stiffer. In part to ensure that the windows became no narrower than they already were, that meant widening the spacing between the columns slightly.
The increase in spacing was only an inch, so that each column would now be forty inches from its neighbor instead of three feet, three inches. But that tiny change meant that there would now be fifty-nine pinstripes per face instead of sixty-one, altering the look of the facade. The design was inherently stiffer for a given amount of steel, but that wasn’t the main reason for the change. The time the big towers took to sway back and forth was too long. It was too easy for the side-to-side push of the vortices to take on the same rhythm, generating huge oscillations. The structural changes would help shorten the jiggle: eleven seconds back and forth, still slower than the Empire State Building but an improvement nonetheless.
There was more, Robertson said. Still another element of his solution was a huge support structure called a hat truss that would sit atop each building and tie its core to its exterior. Already under discussion as a brace to hold up a soaring TV antenna on the north tower, the hat truss could add robustness to the entire building from top to bottom, Robertson knew, with a few tweaks in the design.
And finally, Robertson wanted to twist the orientation of the rectangular core— containing interior structural columns, fire stairwells, and elevators— in one of the towers. No longer true twins, the north tower’s core would run east-west, and the south tower’s north-south. The change would discourage the towers from dancing in unison.
Glanz, James; Lipton, Eric (2014-01-21). City in the Sky: The Rise and Fall of the World Trade Center (pp. 165-166). Henry Holt and Co.. Kindle Edition.
Please compare this verbatim excerpt to the excerpt I posted earlier & tell me what I “twisted”.
Then, perhaps, you can tell me how I am “twisting” the following verbatim excerpts from the NIST Report.
NIST said:NCSTAR1-2A
3.2.8 Hat Truss Modeling
In both WTC 1 and WTC 2, a truss system referred to as a ‘hat truss’ was constructed between floor 107 and the roof. The hat truss system was intended to support the load of the antenna on top of the tower and to interconnect the exterior walls to the core.
If you’re still not clear on why it is a good idea to interconnect the core & external column, perhaps this quote will provide you with a little insight.
NIST said:NCSTAR1-2A
Sec 4.2.3 pg. 74
“The hat truss system distributed both gravity loads and wind loads between the core and the exterior walls.”
Are you going to write to the NIST structural engineers, with your quote excerpt, and tell them “WRONG. It doesn’t ‘interconnect the exterior walls to the core’. And it doesn’t ‘distribute the wind loads between the core & exterior walls’. It ONLY supports the antenna. Because ... that's how I read THIS QUOTE.!”
__
Thanks for providing a reference which mentions the phrase “hat truss” one time, and says not one word about its function.
I am sorry Mr tfk... you are misinformed as to why the hat truss was employed in the twin towers.
Time to stop digging, JS.
Your comment about my "faking it" is both wrong & uncalled for.
And you know it.
You jumped the shark with what you thought was an opportunity to get a little payback for some of the times that I've been hard on you.
You jumped at the wrong time, guy.
You can step back, act like an adult, and rescind your comments.
Or not.
Whichever path you choose will have an impact on both how people view your response when you've been shown to be wrong about some trivial topic.
And it'll have an impact on our future interactions.
Your choice.
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