Shrinker
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2004
- Messages
- 1,459
Look at survivor accounts for the towers. The was a fire marshall for each tower and knowing one tower would not work in the other.
The 3 stairwells were able to weave between the hallways.
First realize that no one here has ever posted an image or a link to a site that shows us the stel core columns that FEMA states existed. I've posted this url which to a site having many photos showing the concrete. It will take familiarity of concrete and steel to feel very secure with the knowledge that the cores were concrete. Basically because no steel core columns ever show, we know this image is concrete.
Content that was a breach of Rule 4 has been removed. As stated in your last warning any further breaches would result in an automatic 3 day suspension.Replying to this modbox in thread will be off topic Posted By: Darat
Sadly Chris, you've posted images with text daubed on them, that make claims the pictures simply don't support. The images show chaos, nothing more.
Now I'm interested in getting more information about the layout of these concrete cores. The layout you describe certainly isn't impossible, the floorplans I've seen might only represent every second floor, and might only represent one of the towers. However I'm not stupid. The sunset picture shows that the core of each floor is the same as the floor below for over 90% of the floors.
The black and white picture looks exactly like an exposed steel core awaiting its drywall cladding. It does not match the floorplans I've seen or the sunset image.
The FEMA and NIST reports, the floorplans and the two photos are all mutually consistent, and there's no need for two different core layouts. They are also consistent with the logical construction process: build core, add floors, add drywall when construction is complete. Its simple ,consistent and easy.
In your version the floorplans don't match the core of one tower or 50% of the floors in the other. In your version the two towers have to be different to accomodate the two different photos. Your version doesn't match what's in the sunset photo at all, and demands a very creative interpretation of the black and white one. It contradicts every expert in the field, and in order to explain some of the other photos I posted earlier it required the concrete core to be built inside the building, several stories below the advancing steelwork and floors. I'm no expert, but that seems a bit weird does it not?
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