Most important to the purposes of our discussion is that Palmer knew what was going on below the 78th floor. Heat goes up.
Yes, indeed. And that fact doesn't help you.
It seems at this point I should say something like, "make up your mind" "or you can't have it both ways" or "either you can see them or you cannot see them".
Here's that reading comprehension again. You're the one who seems to claim it isn't the same structure. You say one's rebar, and the other box columns. But they are clearly the same. The higher resolution picture shows columns, so that's the one I'm trusting. The other one shows pixels that we can't make out. Only you call it rebar.
How can the latter, lower structure be the "same structure" they are obviously different. One is large and well defined the other sketchy and part (lower right) is pixelated out altogether.
You've obviously never used a digital camera nor handled digital pictures, chris. The two pictures haven't the same resolution. That's why it looks different. Sheesh. I knew that back when I was 17. And that was in the early 90s!
Yes it could seem as if i was making it up as I go and it took over a year to remember anything at all. Memory is a tricky thing, we all know this.
I'm encouraged by the fact you admit this. Do you also admit that memory can be terribly wrong about details one thinks one remembers ?
The last significant recall I had was about the 6 inch rebar. I remember marvelling at the amount of work in tight difficult spaces in order to weld 6 inch think deep fillets that were round.
The un-bendable rebar that you also claim was bent ?
Prior to that was the built in cutting charges of the floors that cut the interior box columns so perfectly people who should know better say they sheared at the site or cut at the mill.
I'm fairly certain that cutting charges could never produce such a clean cut. Seriously.
So you DO have it. Of course, I'd like some proof.
Towers with smaller cores are constructed, as you say, by building the core first, above the steel framework. The reason is that the steel reinforced concrete core absorbs the lateral loading and the amount of steel used can be reduced making the tower lighter and therefore taller.
With larger cores the steel is expended in order to create a framework to support the outer formwork for the core. Erecting that formwork free standing is quite tricky and requires extensive, braced scaffolding which must be erected and taken down over and over. very expensive. By building the outer steel framework and using it as scaffold the expense of the temporary scaffold is eliminated as the floors provide work space and interior box columns support the outer core forms.
I'll be waiting for someone in construction to confirm this. Architect ?
Now can you reasonably accept that this is the steel reinforced core of WTC 2?
No, because I can't make out what it is. Your claim that it can only be concrete seems dubious to me, because if I can't make out what's in there, I doubt you can. I've already explained alternative explanations, though I don't claim to actually know what I'm seeing. A video of this shot would help.