Maybe you should actually reply to my question. I didn't ask how WTC1 and 2 differed from a conventional implosion. I'm aware there are differences. The purpose of a standard demolition, or an implosion, is to bring a building down in such a way as to minimize damage to adjacent structures. This was not the case with WTC1 and 2.
I asked how would the destruction of each tower have looked different, if WTC 1 and 2 were blown up from the top-down? You are saying that WTC 1 and 2 were not destroyed by explosive charges. Okay, but if explosive charges were used what would it look like?
Apologies. I veered to a tangent.
What would it look like?
1) The interior would be gutted. Every floor, not just the initiation zone.
2) The windows would be removed. On every floor, not just the initiation zone.
3) There would be a sequence of flashes and loud bangs. These would be unmistakeable, and heard by everyone for a long way around.
4) In all likelihood, since this would be an
extremely risky demolition, there would be flashes and bangs throughout the lower part of the tower, weakening critical supports, just in case.
5) There would be no fire. It would damage the explosives and triggers.
6) There would be no plane crash. It would damage the explosives and triggers.
7) There would be no people. If you walk into an office building, and find the floors gutted, with explosives rigged up, would you stick around?
Beyond that, if all went well, once collapse intiated, it would progress much like what you saw on 9/11 (things falling downwards).
ETA:
Heya, Cl1m. Heiwa pointed ou a small detail I overlooked in the following post
No...
As near as I can figure, Heiwa believes that if the columns of the upper section did not impact exactly on the columns of the lower section, then the upper section would have fallen through the lower section, stripping out the floors but leaving the frame intact and standing.
To which you replied:
I... I'm not sure that's any better. Wow.
And Heiwa's correction:
Almost right. Half the wall columns above will hit nothing as they are outside the building when dropping and the other half of wall columns are inside slicing the floors.
Only floors above will contact columns below, and as stated many times, the floors will fail. The columns below will remain.
After a while the locally damaged floors are jammed between the columns below and ... that's it. No global collapse! Just local failures up top.
Not so difficult to figure out.
I have a feeling Bazant & Co fooled you. But they are no real engineers.
Make you feel any better?