I still think its funny he thinks all these thermite/thermate cutters could go off and no one sees them. Especially when the perimeter columns would need to be cut and doing that would have been impossible to hide.

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Oh, I know, I know... I've said this a million times over it seems, and even once or twice in this thread here, but just because I address a conspiracy peddler doesn't necessarily mean the info is aimed at him. It's for lurkers, newbies, etc. etc.
Dabljuh devolved into a brick wall all the way back when he brought up the old canards about the towers' redundancy and the "never in history" claim. Everything else since then has been about showing people what the right information is. Remember, this is the poster that started out talking about explosions and brought up arguments Steven Jones doesn't even use anymore. I know he's a brick wall. Walls are good for hanging the right picture on. You just got to hammer the nail a bit harder when the brick resists.
The proof of the presence of thermite does not prove that the buildings were brought down with thermite. However, especially circumstantial evidence, it would be illogical not to assume so as a start.The reason you shouldn't be too happy is that if you want to claim that this is thermite, you also have to acknowledge that thermite burns spectacularly and visibly, and obviously, this single event, even if it were thermate, could not have structurally compromised the building (let alone both towers). So when one thermite burn is so spectacular, where is the evidence of all the others?
Wrong, wrong, wrong. Burning iron particles produces GOLDEN sparks. You can see those as the hot material falls down, a few sparks ignite. Nothing like the sort of thing you describe.In fact not particularly typical of iron, because iron at this temperature will start to burn when exposed to open air, so we should actually see flying, white-hot sparks, not just falling orange drops.
One word, and you don't manage to back it up.No.[TM]
Actually I was wrong about that when I posted something to that end earlier, but I have already correct that part. The color of the light, i.e. the blackbody radiation, is indeed largely right, apart from some absorption lines. The problem is: 1300°C hot iron produces *red* light. It simply *appears* yellow to the naked eye.Fault. The color of a material is mainly dependent on its temperature.
How do you manage to get so much science wrong? Aluminium is just as combustible as iron, and burns - unlike iron - with SILVER sparks. And no, Aluminium will not have the same color as steel of the same temperature, because it has a much lower emissivity. It won't be visibile in dailight until the 1700°Cs, and even at 2300°C, where it is as *bright* as iron at 1300°C, It'll appear in a different color from iron both at 1300°C or at 2300°C.Thus, at 1200°C, aluminum will have the same color as steel of the same temperature. But, since aluminum is much less combustible, it will not burn.
Some of the windows were destroyed by the plane's impactMmmm, the windows were not blown then from whence did all the smoke seen to pour out of the building come?
But, getting heated by what?Could we imagine that it collected somewhere inside the building, getting heated, before finding its way to the outside? Well, I can.
No, that would be perfectly consistent with a thermate hypothesis.And you find it impossible to imagine that it may have originated farther inside and higher up in the building?
But not without flowing over a significant amount of comparably cool concrete.Vastly higher? Ehr, we see that it runs quite quickly, so it may have found its way from a different location in a matter of seconds.
...Things melt in fires.
Alright, Science-time:This kind of discussion makes me think... 10% of all men are color-blind. (Including me.) The term color-blindness really means color-deficient vision, practically speaking, with reds and greens more than any other areas. Many color blind men are unaware of the fact.
Anyone who claims to be able to make hard, scientific statements on the basis of eyeballing photos is a nincompoop. And since I am sick of this, let me state, This Means You Dabljuh. You are a nincompoop. Go ahead, sic the mods on me. Or ignore me. I don't care.
So you're saying, anyone who makes scientific statements on the basis of his perception of REALITY is a... whatever? That we should only make scientific statements if it does not involve perception of any kind, and if a testable hypothesis does differ in its prediction from an observation, that we should dismiss the observation because it is obviously false?
http://www.sizes.com/materls/colors_of_heated_metals.htmTables comparing temperature and color appeared at least as early as 1836 (Pouillet). The one below shows three attempts at correlating temperature and color. The verbal descriptions given by Howe2 and White and Taylor3 have been omitted and their temperatures placed with the verbal description in the Holcomb Steel data that was closest to theirs. The variation demonstrates how unreliable this method is even in the hands of careful observers.
The variation demonstrates how unreliable this method is even in the hands of careful observers.
Explain it! Lead-Acid batteries contain water, and thus would explode above 100°C, and liquifiy above 350°C.
Yeah but lead melts at 350°C, so how in $DEITY's name would it get over a 1300-1700°C hot pooling on the floor? Also, in the video the incandescent liquid seems to solidify in the orange temperatures, which means it's certainly not lead.Wether they exploded from the heat, or were smashed by the impact of the plane, the lead was contained in plates within the batteries, and would not magically disapear when the batteries were destroyed. There would be a load of lead plates and plastic left mixed in with the plane & office debris that was swept into that corner in the impact.
Simple calculation. (Warning: Math incoming. Non-Asians, brace yourselves!)You also presume temperatures due to color observations without knowledge of what the material is. And emissivity depends on the material(s) observed, so the temperature analysis you purport to have done is indeed dependent on what the composition of the material is. Add to that all the errors due to the camera and monitor as well as the human element, and one wonders how you calculated the figure you did when you are missing multiple variables.
You can't speak of a confidence level when you don't even show the measurements, let alone acknowledge the margin of error in such measurements. Show your work. Plug in the figures, show us how you reached 1100-1300 degrees. Otherwise, all your posts are meaningless.
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And no, Aluminium will not have the same color as steel of the same temperature, because it has a much lower emissivity. It won't be visibile in dailight until the 1700°Cs, and even at 2300°C, where it is as *bright* as iron at 1300°C, It'll appear in a different color from iron both at 1300°C or at 2300°C.
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Just let me point out there that oxidized aluminium is more commonly called clayIron: Solid 0.35, Liquid 0.35
Iron (oxidised): Solid 0.7, Liquid 0.5
Aluminium (Oxidised): Solid 0.3, Liquid no figure quoted
11. Why do some photographs show a yellow stream of molten metal pouring down the side of WTC2 that NIST claims was aluminum from the crashed plane although aluminum burns with a white glow?
NIST reported (NCSTAR 1-5A) that just before 9:52 a.m., a bright spot appeared at the top of a window on the 80th floor of WTC 2, four windows removed from the east edge on the north face, followed by the flow of a glowing liquid. This flow lasted approximately four seconds before subsiding. Many such liquid flows were observed from near this location in the seven minutes leading up to the collapse of this tower. There is no evidence of similar molten liquid pouring out from another location in WTC 2 or from anywhere within WTC 1.
Photographs, and NIST simulations of the aircraft impact, show large piles of debris in the 80th and 81st floors of WTC 2 near the site where the glowing liquid eventually appeared. Much of this debris came from the aircraft itself and from the office furnishings that the aircraft pushed forward as it tunneled to this far end of the building. Large fires developed on these piles shortly after the aircraft impact and continued to burn in the area until the tower collapsed.
NIST concluded that the source of the molten material was aluminum alloys from the aircraft, since these are known to melt between 475 degrees Celsius and 640 degrees Celsius (depending on the particular alloy), well below the expected temperatures (about 1,000 degrees Celsius) in the vicinity of the fires. Aluminum is not expected to ignite at normal fire temperatures and there is no visual indication that the material flowing from the tower was burning.
Pure liquid aluminum would be expected to appear silvery. However, the molten metal was very likely mixed with large amounts of hot, partially burned, solid organic materials (e.g., furniture, carpets, partitions and computers) which can display an orange glow, much like logs burning in a fireplace. The apparent color also would have been affected by slag formation on the surface.
Sure... because they never make mistakes. Or lie intentionally. Whichever you chose.http://wtc.nist.gov/pubs/factsheets/faqs_8_2006.htm
Sounds good enough to me, and since these guys, unlike you, actually investigated, I'll take their word.
Or simply prove them wrong, and send the proof to the authorities.
Wait, you guys never do that, or on the rare occasion you do, you get laughed out of court.
TAM![]()