Tabouère, the top section didn't disintegrate on impact.
last I checked, if you open a bag of cement, the powder that exits, has the same mass as the bag full of cement before it was opened, minus the weight of the bag...which is a nonissue here.
TAM![]()

Just try to find a photo of it after the collapse.
Try to find a big chunk of concrete.
Simple logic, to thing of the same material with the same shape that hit, will blow approximately the same.
Just try to find a photo of it after the collapse.
Try to find a big chunk of concrete.
Simple logic, to thing of the same material with the same shape that hit, will blow approximately the same.
But strangely, it fly in the air![]()
just let fall powder of ciment(not in the bag) on your feet from 2 feet high.
Take the same mass from the same height but in solid concrete....
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to thing of the same material with the same shape that hit, will blow approximately the same.

We can't see the top section once it starts to sink into the lower section, we don't have X-ray vision to see through the dust cloud.
J'ai rien compris, en français s'il vous plaît.
Deux choses composées des même matériaux qui ont à peu près la même forme qui se frappent ensemble vont subir à peu près les mêmes dégâts.
You haven't been making very much sense, but this statement appears to be contradicted by your earlier claim:
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translation:
"when two similar objects (in shape and made with the same materials) collide with each other, they will both suffer the same damage."
Which two objects are you referring to?
The upper section is blown after a few impact.
.
The upper and the lower floor.
I guess you understand none.
Damn
2- A floor made of SOLID concrete that hit a floor below of the same material will have probably the same kind of damage of the floor below.
1- 2 lbs of powder cement that fell from a height of 2 feet on my feet will do no damage at all if the powder is out of the bag.
If I take some of the powder and make solid block of concrete with of 2 lbs and I let it fell that block on my feet from a height of two, it is possible that it will break my feet.
The upper and the lower floor.
You have not show one single piece of evidence to back this claim up, so thus far it is your opinion only.
TAM![]()
The 2 lb. block of concrete doesn't have much of a chance of breaking your feet. It still only weighs two pounds, after all.
simple physic and simple observation.
two identical cars. one is stationary, the other drives toward it at an angle...is the damage to both the same?
TAM![]()
simple physic and simple observation.
The entire top section fell with all its weight and kinetic energy on the impact floors. You can't possibly think the floors receiving that force could have withstood it, let alone offer enough resistance to nullify it.
I'm in no way a physicist, nor an engineer, but this is ridiculous.