Christopher7
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2006
- Messages
- 6,538
C7 said:The photo was enough to prove that even if a fire did exist in the north east generator room, it would not have been a factor in the collapse.
Grizzly Bear said:This is exactly the point that NIST makes in it's final draft...
Yes, there were NO reports of fire on the fifth floor at any time.Was there more evidence available at the time to support this?
Any room with diesel engines would be ventilated and any fire would have produce smoke that would have been visible.
The photo on pg 26 of the FEMA report is enough to establish:
1) There was no fire in the north east generator room at or before 2:10 p.m.
2) Even if there was a fire in this room, it would not be a factor in the collapse. A fire with no ventilation could not burn hot enough to be a factor in the collapse.
There were NO reports of fire on floor 5 at any time and there was NO reason to think there was a fire in the north east generator room.Do you really believe that one photo in the FEMA report, a snapshot of one moment in time out of seven hours, would be enough for NIST to conclude back then that there was no fire in that room at any point during the day?
Baseless speculation has no place in a scientific document.
The diesel fuel fire hypothesis was in reference to heating column 79 to the point where it would fail. A potential diesel fuel fire anywhere else would not have effected the initiating event.And forgive my ignorance if this has already been covered, but why is the possibility of a diesel fire isolated to the generator room? I feel like I remember reading that there were pipes that supplied the fuel from outside the room that could have been compromised, thus feeding a diesel fire that was not in the generator room. That possibility is no longer supported, but was that known conclusively as of the preliminary report?