Lurker
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 15, 2002
- Messages
- 4,189
What I'm here to do is narrow my focus to small, digestible chunks of information, such as the point Lurker made about "safety factor," a great piece of terminology which will help me understand things better.
And to Lurker: I'm not even a Junior level engineer (however my father is a civil and structural engineer with 35 years experience), but I have a very solid science background, I understand debates, and I understand reason and logic. Just those skills alone are hard to come by in forums like these.
All righty then. My father also is a Civil Engineer but his area was not structures. Have you asked your father about the WTC, factors of safety, and impact loading?
Anyway, the formula I provided shows that the force from the upper part impacting onto the lower part is a minimum of 2xWeight. Actually, it got me thinking about structures in general and if they always use factors of safety below two. If so, then every building would experience total collapse if a whole section fell into the whole section below.
My guess is that not all structures have WTC factors of safety. Why do I think this? My guess is the steel girders come in certain standard sizes and are not scaleable from one building to another. Thus, building that are not skyscrapers probably have higher factors of safety than what the WTC has. Not because engineers feel they need that high a level, but because there is no need to downsize the steel beams which would probably cost more money.
Lurker