jsfisher
ETcorngods survivor
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2005
- Messages
- 24,532
Because 175 had windows in it and would have folded up like a piece of paper the moment it saw a steel wall, never mind flew into it.
Physics says otherwise.
Why do you hate physics?
Because 175 had windows in it and would have folded up like a piece of paper the moment it saw a steel wall, never mind flew into it.
What is a heat sink?
I'm satisfied that it was grey and had no windows in it.
Whatever it was, it was not 175.
Because 175 had windows in it and would have folded up like a piece of paper the moment it saw a steel wall, never mind flew into it.
Because 175 had windows in it and would have folded up like a piece of paper the moment it saw a steel wall, never mind flew into it.
What is a heat sink?
But they don't prevent something from penetrating them, do they? And how many windows were on each of the four sides of the tower?The windows had no effect on the strength, because they were sunk in the corrugation and only about 18 inches wide.
First, it's fuselage, not fusilage. Second, your video did nothing to support your contention, all it showed was the explosion in the WTC tower. Have something more relevant? Something which might demonstrate the stength or weakness of an aircraft?Here is one basis for a standard fusilage to be so weak,
http://youtube.com/watch?v=l38oEJwAb1Q
This is what you call a fire,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIq6mNI0dzc&mode=related&search=
The building blazed for something like twenty hours, a proper blaze. Nothing fell down including a crane that was perched precariously right on the top of the building.
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/spain_fire_2005.html
Fire alone has never dropped a steel framed building and never will. As I am sure you are fully aware. The fire just can't get hot enough. That's why stoves are made out of steel, because fire can't melt steel.
More than a quarter of a million dollars worth of hay has gone up in smoke after an arson attack in the Manawatu. The fire near Feilding thwarted the best efforts of firefighters and left one man's livelihood in ruins.
The fire on Reid Line West started at just after 2am on Sunday. At its peak, four fire appliances played a part in attempts to douse the flames. The river was pumped dry trying to deal with it. Two army water tankers from Linton were brought in to help as well as another tanker from Palmerston North. Feilding station officer Glenn Davies says the flames melted the steel shed causing it to collapse onto the bales, limiting the access for firefighters.
TVNZ
The fire spread rapidly throughout Building One, and the upper floors soon became untenable. The blaze blocked the stairwell at the south end of the building, so most of the workers rushed to the north stairwell. This meant that approximately 1,100 people were trying to leave the third and fourth floors through a single stairwell.
The first fire apparatus arrived at 4:40 p.m., their response time having been extended because of the relatively remote location of the facility and the gridlock conditions typical of Bangkok traffic. Arriving fire-fighters found Building One heavily involved in flames and already beginning to collapse, with people jumping from the third and fourth floors.
Despite the fire-fighters' efforts, Building One collapsed completely at approximately 5:14 p.m. Fanned by strong winds blowing toward the north, the blaze spread quickly into Buildings Two and Three before the fire brigade could effectively defend them. Building Two reportedly collapsed at 5:30 p.m., and Building Three at 6:05 p.m.
The Kader Toy Factory Fire
The fire spread was very rapid due to the lack of compartmentalization, the large amount of fuel, and lack of means of suppression. The unprotected steel roof trusses failed early on in the fire due to the same factors.
McCormick Place fire, Chicago
On the morning of January 28, 1997, in the Lancaster County, Pennsylvania township of Strasburg, a fire caused the collapse of the state-of-the-art, seven year old Sight and Sound Theater and resulted in structural damage to most of the connecting buildings. The theater was a total loss, valued at over $15 million.
Sight and Sound Theatre fire, Strasburg
The Windsor Tower was a fraction of the size of WTC7. WTC7's fire is the largest office fire in history. The Windsor Tower is not a steel framed building. It is a steel framed building with a solid concrete core and concrete mechanical floors. Concrete resists fire better than steel. The Windsor Tower did not suffer any structural damage prior to the fire starting. Despite all of this the entire upper steel structure of the building suffered total collapse. The Windsor Tower fire is evidence that buildings can collapse due to fire.
Where on earth did you get those figures from, Popular Mechanics?
Still ignoring momentum and kinetic energy I see malcolm.
Why do you hate physics so? Did your science or math teacher cause you great emotional harm at some point?
An environment capable of absorbing heat.
Fuselage it is. There is surely other stuff to make my point and I will trawl it up from the net. Time is pressing more each day now and there'll be no change for at least three weeks. I won't forget. For now if you liken a commercial plane to an easter egg, you'll be getting along the right lines.But they don't prevent something from penetrating them, do they? And how many windows were on each of the four sides of the tower?
First, it's fuselage, not fusilage. Second, your video did nothing to support your contention, all it showed was the explosion in the WTC tower. Have something more relevant? Something which might demonstrate the stength or weakness of an aircraft?
One planted 6ft piece on a roof, doesn't cut any ice with me. It probably came off the back of the same pickup that delivered the Shanksville 'wreckage'.Undoubtedly you are satisfied. Rationalists, however, find it tedious to debunk recycled claims over and over. Most conspiracy liars abandoned the no-windows myth years ago. Photos of the wreckage show windows. Yes, yes, your mathematically-impossible planted all the evidence...
And on it goes.
Sorry, the south tower fire was almost out. All that anyone was complaining about was the smoke. I'll dig up a photo if you insist, of a woman stood in the hole the plane had gone in. How hot could that be?Utterly useless.
The Windsor Tower was a fraction of the size of WTC7. WTC7's fire is the largest office fire in history. The Windsor Tower is not a steel framed building. It is a steel framed building with a solid concrete core and concrete mechanical floors. Concrete resists fire better than steel. The Windsor Tower did not suffer any structural damage prior to the fire starting. Despite all of this the entire upper steel structure of the building suffered total collapse. The Windsor Tower fire is evidence that buildings can collapse due to fire.
If that's not good enough for you:
Once again, Malcolm, you are wrong.
-Gumboot
It truly never ceases to amaze me that truthers can look at this building and call it evidence that fire won't hurt a steel framed tower.
Before:
[qimg]http://i9.tinypic.com/6807rrm.jpg[/qimg]
After:
[qimg]http://i9.tinypic.com/4kx28f6.jpg[/qimg]
Yeah, that really convinces me that fire is perfectly fine for steel-framed architecture.![]()
Sorry, the south tower fire was almost out. All that anyone was complaining about was the smoke. I'll dig up a photo if you insist, of a woman stood in the hole the plane had gone in. How hot could that be?
The fireball from the attack plane spent itself outside the tower immediately after impact, pretty soon, the smoke had turned black = not enough oxygen = a not very hot fire. The firemen's tapes said so, but then the Port Authority kept a grip of them for 12 months, no doubt losing the more incriminating fireman's tapes. What's a private firm doing holding on to public material and why?
Would you like me to find a photo of the woman?
"... Ladder 15, we've got two isolated pockets of fire. We should be able to knock it down with two lines. Radio that, 78th floor numerous 10-45 Code Ones."
9:52 a.m.
Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven to Battalion Seven Alpha."
"Freddie, come on over. Freddie, come on over by us."
Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven ... Ladder 15, we've got two isolated pockets of fire. We should be able to knock it down with two lines. Radio that, 78th floor numerous 10-45 Code Ones."
Ladder 15: "What stair are you in, Orio?"
Battalion Seven Aide: "Seven Alpha to lobby command post."
Ladder Fifteen: "Fifteen to Battalion Seven."
Battalion Seven Chief: "... Ladder 15."
Ladder 15: "Chief, what stair you in?"
Battalion Seven Chief: "South stairway Adam, South Tower."
Ladder 15: "Floor 78?"
Battalion Seven Chief: "Ten-four, numerous civilians, we gonna need two engines up here."
Ladder 15: "Alright ten-four, we're on our way."
Why didn't the Madrid building do this,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDt3mVlI8mk
You'll see plenty of evidence of explosive squibs. But, even more telling.
If you look at 1 min 40 secs to 1m 46 secs and again at 2 mins 50 secs.
You will actually see material going both up and propelled outwards.
When a building is coming down, no part of it is supposed to go UP.
The only reason stuff can go UP, is if it's Blown UP.
There goes that common sense again.
Because 175 had windows in it and would have folded up like a piece of paper the moment it saw a steel wall, never mind flew into it.
The outer wall was especially strong to give more floorspace. The windows had no effect on the strength, because they were sunk in the corrugation and only about 18 inches wide.
Belz... said:Do you EVER make sure of anything before uttering such nonsense ?
Fire CAN and DOES melt steel.
Fires does not NEED to melt steel in order to make it collapse.
Fire HAS dropped steel buildings.
How many more falsehoods to you have ?
What were the biggest man made heat sinks in the world?
I'll give you a clue, there were two of them and they got blown up on 9/11 2001, along with over three thousand innocent office workers, fire fighters and police.
We live in a sea, just like fish do. We live in a sea of air. The higher up you go, the thinner our sea of air gets. So much so, that at five miles high, it's all gone. How strong a nose do you need to fly through that?
