Since the 1993 bombing every vehicle that entered the WTC Truck Dock was inspected and sniffed by a PAPD exposives detection dog.
Source and empirical evidence, please?
Explosives leave forensic evidence. Residue, remains of devices, distinct damage marks, etc. Forensic teams sifted through 1.4 million tonnes of debris by hand, looking for anything like this. They found none.
Source? And sifting equates to chemical testing now?
Garbage. There are countless videos of the collapses.
How many videos captured the event in the basement during or after impact? How many videos captured the first impact?
Not a diversion, Gravy, why is it a strawman? Is that the question your accusing me of avoiding? Or you could just come out again and state the question again.
White smoke in the tower's basement is now kerosene vapor according to you, or at least your expert, Roger Sanders, Waste Oil Heater article. Well if you want to use Roger Sanders as an expert on JetA fuel vapor, that is your choice. Why you would choose to do so is beyond me. An explanation for the white smoke, I presume. Who is Roger Sanders anyway and how does a waste oil heater prove anything in relation to the topic?
So I decided to take a look at the worst case scenario:
A Review of the Flammability Hazard of JetA Fuel Vapor In Civil Transport Aircraft Fuel Tanks. And to my suprise, there is not a single mention of JetA fuel vapor in a white smoke form. Well to give you the benefit of the doubt I decided to check out
Shepherd, J. E., Explosion of Aviation Kerosene (Jet A) Vapors, CIT Presentation at
NTSB Meeting, October 7, 1997, NTSB Docket No. SA-516, Exhibit No. 20F.
And to my suprise again, not a single mention of jetA fuel vapors being white.
So to answer your question after doing some homework, I'm confident that the white smoke observed in the basement or anywhere for that matter was not JetA fuel vapor as you contend.
Have you changed your mind regarding what the "white smoke" might be?
I have seen no accounts that indicate structural damage after the north tower elevator shaft blast.
Of course that doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Were there structural engineers in the sublevels during the first impact?
So, according to logic and common sense, not the mention physics, an FAE fits the testimony very well, indeed.
I have seen no emperical evidence to support the fireball theory. I have only seem assumptions made by NIST. Assumptions on the fuel that ignited and assumptions on the fuel remaining. NIST to my knowledge has shown no calculations supporting the assumption that a fireball in the basement caused the damage witnessed there.