Furcifer
Guest
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2007
- Messages
- 13,797
Actually, you do not need math to prove it. Just common sense.
No, you need math. Without out it you have nothing. That's how things work.
Actually, you do not need math to prove it. Just common sense.
So if that really happened, part C would be sliced in two parts by part A from below. No crush down of part A by part C. No, a real upper cut from below of part C by part A.
But, rest assured. There is to little potential energy involved. Part C will just get stuck up on top on part A.
Because - steel structures cannot globally collapse or, rather, be crushed down due to gravity alone when you drop a small part of the structure on the remainder below!
I just said it in message #1 of this thread and nobody seems to able to prove it is wrong.
So you missed my paper at http://heiwaco.tripod.com/nist3.htm ? Actually, you do not need math to prove it. Just common sense.
Einstein said,... Just common sense. ...
Because - steel structures cannot globally collapse or, rather, be crushed down due to gravity alone when you drop a small part of the structure on the remainder below!
I just said it in message #1 of this thread and nobody seems to able to prove it is wrong.
Next time use physics and you will find your conclusion is false."Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen.”
Now you have learnt a little what can happen when you drop anything on something and try to compress something. This basic knowledge is used in this paper.
No they don't. They will no doubt offset somewhat. On one side the columns might move in a little and put the weight on the floor but the other side would move outside the perimeter and remove a great deal of weight from the impacted floor. The core columns would be applying almost all their weight inside the core.Once the top section tipped enough it broke free - correct?
Or do the columns magically stay connected?
A child can see WTC 7 fall straight down at near free fall [actual free fall for the first 105 feet].
Because - steel structures cannot globally collapse or, rather, be crushed down due to gravity alone when you drop a small part of the structure on the remainder below!
What I can do is present arguments that the 4 ton frame sections could not be ripped apart and hurled up to 500 feet laterally by a falling building or debris.
I feel I have done that by establishing that the spring idea would not work and the fact that the building was collapsing a 5 or more floors per second which would drive sections down as they were torn loose. There would be some lateral ejection but nothing close to 400-500 feet.
No one here has a feasible answer so they just say "yes it can" and have shift to "not loud enough".
The theory is all about floors impacting floors and that would not happen all at once.
So you missed my paper at http://heiwaco.tripod.com/nist3.htm ? Actually, you do not need math to prove it. Just common sense.
The upper part C is evidently smaller than the lower part A and as both parts destroy each other at contact assuming part C is dropped on part A; upper part C will be destroyed before lower part A. However, upper part C can only apply potential energy on lower part A. When part C just rests on lower part A there is no problem - part A is just compressed a little as compressive stresses in part A are just 0.3 of permissible stresses. That's how the towers were built. Now, if you drop part C on part A (how? - using a crane), there will be an impact but what contacts what? Two perimeter walls of part C will no doubt miss part A below and the other two walls will just contact the top floor of part A. It will not crush down part A. Just damage the top floor. Part A perimeter walls on the other hand will destroy the bottom floor of part C - the upper part! .
So if that really happened, part C would be sliced in two parts by part A from below. No crush down of part A by part C. No, a real upper cut from below of part C by part A.
But, rest assured. There is to little potential energy involved. Part C will just get stuck up on top on part A.
Because - steel structures cannot globally collapse or, rather, be crushed down due to gravity alone when you drop a small part of the structure on the remainder below!
I just said it in message #1 of this thread and nobody seems to able to prove it is wrong.
With respect, this is just plain wrong.
Firstly - as has been pointed out to you many, many times - the towers employed a compiste structural system wherein the outer envelope, floors, inner core, and hat trusses acted together to ensure overall stability. A failure of any one of these therefore affects the stability of the overall structure. Your model assumes that each section is structurally stable (barring the fall itself and the immediate crush zone), which is patently not the case.
Secondly, and very closely linked to this, you continually refer to intact sections outwith the collapse and crush zones without ever demonstrating that the columns and beams - for this is what you focus on - are capable of accepting the loads without further failure.
Thirdly, you have been challenged numerous times to produce competent structural calculations in the face of what is best described as scathing criticism of your generalisations. You have failed to do so. That does not qualify as "not being able to prove you wrong". Rather, you have wholly failed to prove yourself correct.
Heiwa, since your common sense analysis doesn't refer in any way to the properties of steel, would you claim that this is true of any structure, or just of steel structures? If the latter, what's fundamentally different about steel structures that renders them immune to collapse when other structures aren't? Simple language and common sense analysis will do fine.
Dave
No they don't. They will no doubt offset somewhat. On one side the columns might move in a little and put the weight on the floor but the other side would move outside the perimeter and remove a great deal of weight from the impacted floor. The core columns would be applying almost all their weight inside the core.
The theory is all about floors impacting floors and that would not happen all at once.
No, you need math. Without out it you have nothing. That's how things work.
Are you under the impression that simply because the components of the upper part are breaking into pieces that they lose all of their mass/energy?
Actually, you do not need math to prove it. Just common sense.
L, here's a summary I assembled a couple of years ago of Christopher 7's belief that "common sense" trumps science, physical evidence, etc.Christopher, I have heard you use this expression several times. It's an expression I've heard other conspiracy theorists use, and I find that interesting. It seems like the point you are trying to make is that, if we just used common sense, we'd be able to see things your way. Have I got that right?
Heiwa, this is a simple question along the same lines as the one I posed to Chirstopher. Don't be offended; I just want to hear your honest answer.
Do you believe that common sense and math are equivalent, in the sense that if common sense tells you something, the math should check out? Do you believe common sense is absolutely trustworthy in all cases?
For example... with the JFK theories, one of the arguements that Ozwald couldn't have shot JFK is that his head jerked in the opposite direction of the bullet. That goes completely against common sense. Well, it turns out common sense was wrong, in this particular case. I've seen demonstrations (they do it on the P&T show) of a bullet going through an watermelon, turns out the force of the bullet pushes the object towards the bullet. Now, this has nothing to do with WTC, but it's the best example I can think of how common sense tells us something should happen, when in reality the complete opposite happens.
So, what I'm wondering is, do you agree with me that common sense can sometimes leads us to the wrong conclusions? If not, why not? I'm not trying to trap you, just looking for an honest answer.
Firstly it is recognized that the towers consisted of perimeter walls, core structure, floors and a hat truss.
The perimeter walls are steel columns connected by steel spandrels. The core structure is steel columns connected by steel beams. The floors are steel trusses carrying a steel/concrete composite; trusses are bolted to the perimeter walls and the core structure;
The hat truss is simply steel beams connecting perimeter walls and core structure at roof level.
All steel structure is designed with FoS > 3.
Secondly, the towers have great redundancy. You can remove parts of perimeter walls, core structure and floors anywhere and nothing happens except local falures! Example - a plane slices a perimeter wall and damages core structure and floors.
Thirdly, if you read my articles carefully you find a fair amount of structural calculations to confirm above and the stability of the parts. Also is described the step by step method to do proper structural damage analysis, the latter which neither NIST nor Bazant & Co has done.
It is pointed out that the alleged destruction is not a collapse but a crush down! An upper part C is alleged to drop on a lower part A.
As the upper part C consists of perimeter walls, core structure, floors and a hat truss it is then described what these sub-parts can inflict on the lower part A, which is similar to part C except for the hat truss.
And the result is quite clear; the stronger sub-parts of C and A will damage the weaker sub-parts, i.e. columns will damage floors and the interface at contact changes, which you have to analyse in the second step.
NIST and Bazant & Co deny this. They suggest that the bottom floor of part C remains intact and is capable of crushing/compressing part A perimeter walls, core structure and floors from top to bottom only assisted by gravity. This is ridiculous. The bottom floors of part C is the first to be affected at contact. So it will be destroyed. And also the second floor of part C may be destroyed if there is enough energy available to do that.
However, the available potential energy of the first step is quite small - say 340 kWh or 1.22 GJ. It is hardly enough for walls and core structure to penetrate the bottom floor of part C and top floor of part A. Thus, further destruction will be stopped already then! As most structure remains intact part C will just bounce on part A and then get stuck up top.
Finally, if you read my articles carefully you see that I describe a completely different destruction of the towers! Part C is destroyed prior dropping on part A. Part C is destroyed by controlled demolition producing a smoke and dust screen that in turn hides - or try to hide - the controlled demolition of part A that follows.
The controlled demolition of parts C and A is quite obvious to the trained eye.