Of what value is a simulation if the allowance for error is so great.
My impression is that there should be some provables that the model is useful as a simulator for what actually might have occurred.
We know the jets cut through the building's steel perimeter like a hot knife through butter.
How is it an unreasonable expectation of the Model, that the landing gear will be shown 'as it did in reality', ejecting out the opposite wall, given it's know exit speed of 105 mph and the unlikelihood that the building couldn't have contained it unless it was blocked by the core. The speed, the dimensions, the weight, and the trajectory of the aircraft when it entered WTC 1 were all known, as were the locations of all the core columns. It would seem doubtful that office furniture would deflect that kind of weight moving at that speed, especially if the outer perimeter offered such little resistance.
Are we to assume that landing gear and engines that were ejected at high speed from the buildings in reality, but were 'contained' by the buildings in the model, did inconsequential internal damage, and that this internal damage was in the range of acceptability for the Model?
Are we are also to assume that this internal damage to the Model, but not to the real building, had no bearing on the the fact that the Model showed a collapse initiation possible when pushed to it's extreme case scenario?
It would seem to me that NIST proved they could make their Models for WTC 1 and WTC 2 collapse, but they never proved that the real buildings would perform similarly.
MM