Grizzly Bear
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- May 30, 2008
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Thermi(a)te melts steel.
*outside a foundry
Wrong!
Please provide an example or stop making that claim.
Quit it with the deductive fallacies... You repeat this ad nauseum hoping that after claiming this a few thousand times it will be taken as fact. On top of that you outright reject any alternative chemical processes dealing with corrosion that are expected conditions of long exposure to an uncontrolled environment.
Fires do not burn hot enough to melt steel but I believe his case in point was that fires DO make steel structural members more vulnerable to failure via plastic creep, and thermal weakening. Therm*te is certainly not required for steel structural members to fail, and there is no evidence that the observed erosion of the samples played any role in collapse, I remind you that these samples were collected a fair amount of time following the collapses...Yes, carbon based fires do not burn hot enough to melt steel without a great deal of forced air.
Thermate is the only known explanation for the liquid slag.
Professor Richard Sisson says it did not melt, it eroded. The cause was the very hot fires in the debris after 9/11 that cooked the steel over days and weeks.
Professor Sisson determined that the steel was attacked by a liquid slag which contained iron, sulphur and oxygen.
However, rather than coming from thermite, the metallurgist Professor Sisson thinks the sulphur came from masses of gypsum wallboard that was pulverised and burnt in the fires. He says:
"I don't find it very mysterious at all, that if I have steel in this sort of a high temperature atmosphere that's rich in oxygen and sulphur this would be the kind of result I would expect."
NIST Approach Summary 12-18-07 pg 6
"The working hypothesis is based on an initial local failure caused by normal building fires, not fires from leaking pressurized fuel lines or fuel from day tanks."
Of course lest not forget the role of potential structural damage to some critical support columns. While alone structural damage resulting directly from the collapse of the towers may not have resulted in the eventual collapse, you appear oblivious to the fact that it nevertheless weakens the structural integrity, making the structure itself more vulnerable to the fires.
Apparently none of the sources you use have come to the same conclusion as yourself. Do we really need to repeat this [yet again]? Sisson provides what his conclusion, included above.Wrong again.
Please post the statement and the source before making that claim.
Of course it doesn't appear that he is referring to NIST in this case. Or do you prefer making specialized red herrings to cast doubt on the subject?Your ability to get things wrong is unlimited.
Nowhere does NIST say that.
You need not look further than your own posts... not that I expect you to read back and take it in... that'd be asking for too much.Please post the specific statements and source or stop making that claim.
In fact you forgot to quote this in your response:
But yet you don't bother to quote that do you Chris? Why is that Chris? It's because you are a con artist. You have no interest in being honest for presenting truth. You are simply cherry picking the information you want and hoping no one notices all the stuff you are intentionally leaving out. This is what makes you a liar Chris.
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