bill smith
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2009
- Messages
- 8,408
How can you say stuff like this?
I keep mixing you up with the other Newton.
Last edited:
How can you say stuff like this?
How can you say stuff like this?
I have of course informed NIST, etc. No reply! I assume they agree and are ashamed of themselves.
LOL. Actually last time I spoke to them they were very pleased that their report was almost universally accepted across the international engineering community......... I have of course informed NIST, etc. No reply! I assume they agree and are ashamed of themselves.
LOL. Actually last time I spoke to them they were very pleased that their report was almost universally accepted across the international engineering community.
And, of course, no one had presented any credible evidence of CD.
So looks like you don't have any credibility on that forum either
LOL. Actually last time I spoke to them they were very pleased that their report was accepted across the international engineering community......... I have of course informed NIST, etc. No reply! I assume they agree and are ashamed of themselves.
LOL. Actually last time I spoke to them they were very pleased that their report was accepted across the international engineering community.
And, of course, no one had presented any credible evidence of CD.
So looks like you don't have any credibility on that forum either
Except...Because mathematics do not deal with rigid bodies.
Under conditions which deal with simplified modeling that reduces the complexity of events? Then...It is an idealized body used in solid mechanics/dynamics only to get a feel for what happens when bodies - both rigid - contact each other, etc.
Why do you still....Anybody, like Bazant & Co, introducing rigid bodies/elements in a structural deformation problem is cheating as those elements cannot be deformed.
....not understand that Bazant's treatment of the upper section was that of a simplified model? You claim to have read his paper, but it doesn't look like you have. Based on that you're in no position to levy criticism... Malpractice of all sorts seems to be pathogenic throughout AE911truth... reading comprehension, and the ability to perform basic case studies are pre-requisites to being credible in the architectural community, is there a reason why you and the rest of AE911 are having difficulty with these?Bazant is worse! He treats the whole problem in 1-D, when it is quite easy to do it in 3-D.
Please remember who we are talking too.A car is designed to be broken in a certain way that dissipates energy and keeps the occupants alive.
.Since when is a rigid body a mathematical approximation? I thought math was exact.
.I like your 'the same piece that can be considered rigid at small accelerations can become amazingly non-rigid at higher ones'. Is that your rubbish in reverse?
.When will we see your rubble getting compacted crushing anything analysis being published?
.Or was it just done?
Yes it was! "A water balloon thrown thru the air, vibrating and oscillating like crazy CAN be considered to be a rigid body"!!
LOL
A water balloon thrown thru the air, vibrating and oscillating like crazy (like those Pixar animation gum drops) CAN be considered to be a rigid body IF your only interest is "what is the path of the CG of the balloon?"
Bad Boy you are thinking pretty clearly it seems. Just do not accept any rubbish you are told as gospel. Trust yourself and your instincts.
Please remember who we are talking too.
Paul
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The jref gets a mention at the beginning of this interview between Frank Greening and Kevin Barrett. Very very interesting. Frank is one of your guys wasn't he ?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=4970586#post4970586
i think if that plane was made of balsa wood it would have still mangled the columns at that speed
lol. You guys sound a bit ragged these days.
Because mathematics do not deal with rigid bodies.
It is an idealized body used in solid mechanics/dynamics only to get a feel for what happens when bodies - both rigid - contact each other, etc. A rigid body does not deform, etc. and does not exist in the real world.
In structural analysis there are no rigid elements but an element can be connected to a support that is fixed, i.e. does not move. That fixed support is quite useful in the analysis! One - the structure will not fly away, two - the total forces/moments at the fixed support must be zero, three - if the structure fails at the fixed support, you have probably done something wrong in your analysis, etc, etc.
Anybody, like Bazant & Co, introducing rigid bodies/elements in a structural deformation problem is cheating as those elements cannot be deformed.
Bazant is worse! He treats the whole problem in 1-D, when it is quite easy to do it in 3-D. However, if you do it properly in 3-D, all tools are available, the result is ... you guessed it; a one way crush down is not possible.
I have of course informed NIST, etc. No reply! I assume they agree and are ashamed of themselves.
I keep mixing you up with the other Newton.
Suppose the plane was hanging statonary in the sky and you flew he building at the aluminium plane at 600 mph do you really think the plane would smash through 33 well braced steel box-columns , go on to destroy 10 massive core columns and partially exit the building through perhaps a dozen more steel box columns ? The physics are exactly the same . Don't rush to answer.
Or do you think the 500,000 ton building would swat the 150 ton plane from the sky ?
I agree. Mathematics is a tool that can be applied to many different disciplines in engineering and science including structural engineering...
And this is where you go wrong....Bazant did this to simplify the analysis....
I don't know why you aren't getting this....
Frank is one of your guys wasn't he ?