Part A? Part C? Somebody has been reading Heiwa's bull. That's your problem right there.
I didn't look at it that way. I suppose part "B" would be what I described as part "C"(upper) increasing in mass and density. The collapse front.Not necessarily. It's Bazant's notation, from back before Heiwa started polluting the waters of intelligent discourse. In fact, the very choice of A and C for the two parts should be rather an obvious hint that they are not the only relevant entities here; anyone whose brain isn't on standby should immediately ask themself, "OK, so what's part B?"
Dave
Yes i see that in the video the upper portion of floors in the building seems to have just as many floors in the lower portion of the building and that when the supports are removed upper part C crushes Lower Part A, and both blocks seem to be destroying each other at the same rate, i assume they started the collapse initaiation in the middle of the building for this very reason and i assume that if they tried to initiate the collapse 3/4 of the way up the building instead of in the middle the top upper part C would dissapear before it completely crushed lower part A and leave about 1/4 of the building standing is that right?
I dont understand why the top section upper part C of the towers when it impacts lower part A of the towers doesnt disintegrate at the same rate it is destroying the lower part C of the towers, so why does it appear that the upper part C of the towers is much more solid that Lower part A wouldnt the upper part C have to be more solid to survive crushing 90 lower floors without disentegrating completely before it reached the bottom?
So how did upper part C survive all the way to the bottom without disintegrating to pieces, i am a computer technician i fix and repair computers part time i am not a structural enginner, so please explain in laymans terms thankyou?
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Not necessarily. It's Bazant's notation, from back before Heiwa started polluting the waters of intelligent discourse. In fact, the very choice of A and C for the two parts should be rather an obvious hint that they are not the only relevant entities here; anyone whose brain isn't on standby should immediately ask themself, "OK, so what's part B?"
Dave
I don't see it in the Bazant and Zhou paper. Is it in the second one?
Yes i see that in the video the upper portion of floors in the building seems
to have just as many floors in the lower portion of the building and that
when the supports are removed upper part C crushes Lower Part A, and
both blocks seem to be destroying each other at the same rate,
<snip>
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To add to what Horatius wrote, I've carefully counted the floors of those videos to answer the same question and found most of them are about 50/50.
So I don't really agree with Horatius on that point.
We really need better camera work on these things!
Jesh..... It's hard enough to edit out the explosions and squibs.![]()
Yes i see that in the video the upper portion of floors in the building seems
to have just as many floors in the lower portion of the building and that
when the supports are removed upper part C crushes Lower Part A, and
both blocks seem to be destroying each other at the same rate, i assume
they started the collapse initaiation in the middle of the building for this very
reason and i assume that if they tried to initiate the collapse 3/4 of the way
up the building instead of in the middle the top upper part C would dissapear
before it completely crushed lower part A and leave about 1/4 of the building
standing is that right?
I dont understand why the top section upper part C of the towers when it impacts
lower part A of the towers doesnt disintegrate at the same rate it is destroying the
lower part C of the towers, so why does it appear that the upper part C of the towers
is much more solid that Lower part A wouldnt the upper part C have to be more solid
to survive crushing 90 lower floors without disentegrating completely before it reached the bottom?
So how did upper part C survive all the way to the bottom without disintegrating
to pieces,
yup...Welcome
Even if the top part is "broken to pieces" it still contains the same mass it started with plus the added mass of all the floors it crushed on the way. The upper part is in fact getting denser not weaker. Laymen enough?
Reading it? uh, huh...Part A? Part C? Somebody has been reading Heiwa's bull. That's your problem right there.
yupAs Newtons Bit notes, I don't think thecritta is just any layperson. It sure appears he has come with an agenda.
The upper block was mostly obscured by smoke and dust as it fell. Where are these notions that it survived intact until it hit the ground coming from?
Persistent mis-readings of Bazant, apparently.
Even if the top part is "broken to pieces" it still contains the same mass it started with plus the added mass of all the floors it crushed on the way. The upper part is in fact getting denser not weaker. Laymen enough?
As Newtons Bit notes, I don't think thecritta is just any layperson. It sure appears he has come with an agenda.
Imagine an old-fashioned bale of straw about 4ft long. You cut the strings and the bale falls apart into 3 or 4 inch flakes, which you can easily throw into your cow stalls. Now suppose you were walking past the barn just when Leroy decides to throw a bale of straw off the top of the stack. Would you rather be hit on the head by a bale that's had its strings cut or a bale that's still compressed into one solid mass?
Imagine an old-fashioned bale of straw about 4ft long. You cut the strings and the bale falls apart into 3 or 4 inch flakes, which you can easily throw into your cow stalls. Now suppose you were walking past the barn just when Leroy decides to throw a bale of straw off the top of the stack. Would you rather be hit on the head by a bale that's had its strings cut or a bale that's still compressed into one solid mass?
.
Imagine an old-fashioned bale of straw about 4ft long. You cut the strings and the bale falls apart into 3 or 4 inch flakes, which you can easily throw into your cow stalls. Now suppose you were walking past the barn just when Leroy decides to throw a bale of straw off the top of the stack. Would you rather be hit on the head by a bale that's had its strings cut or a bale that's still compressed into one solid mass?
Imagine an old-fashioned bale of straw about 4ft long. You cut the strings and the bale falls apart into 3 or 4 inch flakes, which you can easily throw into your cow stalls. Now suppose you were walking past the barn just when Leroy decides to throw a bale of straw off the top of the stack. Would you rather be hit on the head by a bale that's had its strings cut or a bale that's still compressed into one solid mass?
.
