Christophera said:
Consider, would you allow somebody to weld your explosive coated rebar in your tower based on an absolute "do it this way" with out telling them exactly why when you had somebody to tell that had passed a series of security tests over years.
Considering that I would not expect any sane person to participate in the construction of an office building with built-in explosives, I'm afraid that question is a little too hypothetical for me to answer.
I hear what you are saying and it makes sense. A few posts back I commented on the "mutually assured destruction policy" that America has participated in for about 40 years. Everyone I've ever talked to has considered that insane. Our tax dollars paid for hundreds of thousands of nukes and the Twin Towers. Recall, the people of New York voted the towers down several times. They were built despite this public rejection. The things our government has been doing just don't make sense. That we pay for it makes less sense. That is our problem. Media has seriously twisted our perception of what life is about and this has damages our society so badly it almost bears no resemblance to our fathers or grandfathers society. Consider Iran Contra. The savings and loan rip off, BCCI, enron. We've been so divided we cannot even object to these things that show us being ripped off and our intelligence agencies moving drugs in into our country and taking part in international /weapons/drug trading.We know that things are VERY wrong and tear ourselves away from our petty fears, wants and desires long enough or well enough to consider our needs, the needs of future generations. Corrupted by comfort, lies and manipulations.
Christophera said:
I believe they were told. and that a security clearance basically makes a person unable to expose the facts.
Well, hypothetically, if I were insane enough to come up with this explosive-coated rebar plan, I'd probably also have to be insane to think that security clearances would keep everyone from spilling the beans. So I suppose it all makes sense... in an insane sorta way.
The paragraph I wrote above expands on your logic that expresses " in an insane sorta way' and shows how WE HAVE BEEN allowing it, taking part in it and PAYING for it.
Christophera said:
Wind Roger. Wind. Did you see the Tacoma narrows bridge video?
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8849554834285920420&q=tacoma+narrows+bridge&hl=enThat was from a 42 mile an hour wind. The towers were expected to see over 100 MPH winds from occasional hurricanes.The tower faces begin to fly and twist the tower.
Well, that's kinda why I asked, because I think I have a basic understanding of what happened to that long, thin, flat Tacama Narrows Bridge, and I just can't picture anything remotely similar happening with a tall, square office building. The towers were designed to withstand the huge lateral loads produced by wind, yes, but that would produce bending, not torsion. That bending was resisted by the exterior column "tube," not the core, and it seems to me any torsion produced by wind would be pretty danged negligable in a design that could withstand that bending, without any help from the core. Everything I've read says the core was designed to just carry vertical loads, and I can't think of any reason why that's not the case.
I've got to say thank you for your comment there. You are truly a common sense individual with respect for reason. I've been trying to get "Architect" to answer the question you just partially answered regarding the cores ability to resist torsion.There was torsion caused by the wind, and bending as you say. The moment frames and the perimeter wall did mostly take care of bending, as you say. Your point made, which I've been trying to get "Architect" to acknowledge for pehaps 30 pages now, is that a set of columns inside of a core area approximatly 1/2 the dimensions of an outside set of square walls, would add no resistance to torsion.
In the 1990 documentary I viewed called "The Construction of the Twin Towers", the first 30 minutes was devoted to the design process. Yamasaki took Robertsons original core column design and built a model to scale and loaded then subjected it to wind tunnel tests. He found that the towers resistence to bending was acceptable, but, with loads applied, the very tall proportions and winds over 65 miles per hour showed deflections of the perimeter walls that indicated failures would probably occur over 75 MPH of wind. 110 MPH winds in hurricane were normal at times and the spec.'s bascially called for resistence to 120 MPH. Yamasaki abandoned the steel core columns and utilized the steel reinforced cast concrete core as it handed lateral displacements better and dealt very well with the torsion issue.
Please, examine the page I've put together that shows silhouettes of the towers using what I know from the documentary to explain the images,Understanding Silhouetted Images Of The Towers,
http://algoxy.com/psych/9-11corexplosions.html
It begins with the 3rd image down. WTC 1 was almost unrentable because of the poor access across the core.
One hallway in opposite directions perpindicuarly every other floor. It actually was about 30% empty up till 2001 as far as I can tell. Mostly government offices because the gov. employees HAD to tolerate the poor access. After WTC 1 reached it's max height, construction was basically stopped on WTC 1 to start WTC 2 which had a redesigned core having 2 hallways in each direction which could be rented immediately.
Also, please examine the issues I've pointed out with the expanding planes of debris and the vertical valley formed between them down low on the page. Common sense stuff.