Sunstealer
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 3,128
You should read my papers at http://heiwaco.tripod.com/nist3.htm and http://heiwaco.tripod.com/nist7.htm . Explains everything quite clear!
I see from (part III stage 2)
You have claimed FOS>3, but only from thisStage 2: At such temperatures, structural steel suffers a decrease of yield strength and loses its load carrying capacity! (Actually the load carrying capacity is reduced abt 20% at 500°C and with a Factor of Safety >3 no serious decrease of load carrying capacity should happen). Actually the load carrying capacity is reduced abt 20% at 500°C and with a Factor of Safety >3 no serious decrease of load carrying capacity should happen).
There is no calculation to show how you come to this figure. You then go on to assume decreased load carrying capability based on this figure at 500°C when we know that structural steel lose atleast half of their yield stress at this temperatures.The upper part of WTC 1 is a problem for NIST. Its weight was not massive, only about 33 000 tons and the uniform density was <0.18! It consisted of 95% air. The load bearing columns - the primary structure carrying this weight - occupied only 0.13% of the total foot print or floor area in the initiation zone - the rest was air, floors and furniture, which is an indication how strong the lower structure columns were! The compressive static forces and associated stresses in the columns were low - <30% of the yield stress, i.e. a Factor of Safety, FoS, against yield more than 3. And the built in strain energy, strength, to keep the upper part together was exactly the same as for the structure below.
Please show you calculations for a FoS > 3.
You would be much better off writing a proper paper than wasting time with your webshite.
Edit: I'll also add that a narrative is "a story or account of events". If the collapse is as you claim then a narrative of what happened is needed. i.e. how much explosive was used, which parts of the structure needed wiring up, what explosive was used, how was it detonated, how long did it take for this to be accomplished, by whom, how and when etc, etc. It's another whole topic.
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