Sam.I.Am
Illuminator
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2009
- Messages
- 4,627
1. Steel, not metal, steel needs alot energy to be molten, and i have troubles beliving the conditions at GZ were enough to do that. Other metals, sure, but not steel. and i mean really molten like in "rivers of molten steel" not just some yellow glowing steel profiles.
that would have been strange in my eyes. what would that mean?
i don't know. as a truther you look for everything that looks strange to you or confirms your opinion. I think you are right about themite not able to do it weeks after the collapse.
i also used the same video clips to "prove" molten steel has been spotted at GZ. Only because i believed it to be strange. without being able to answer what that means in detail.
Thank you for your response. I've always been of the opinion that truthers used glowing metal beams to mean (very incorrectly) molten steel.
My own opinion is that there were tens of tons of metals that would "Flow in rivers" in the buildings (copper for example) well before the steel would and that there was, and is, no way to discern between the various metals or any combinations of them. This wasn't a controlled furnace or incinerator.
(did I mention that I used to run an incinerator at a waste water treatment plant burning off poop?)
It was a balancing act between keeping the poop as dry as possible through polymers and flow rates, the fuel oil usage as low as possible and the temperatures right in the range to dry out and burn the poop thoroughly in the lower hearths. God help you if the biology changes and the flocculates need more or less dissolved oxygen than what you have in the treatment process...
Closing out the incinerator for the week was not easy. Stopping the poop was easy. Shutting off the fuel for the burners was easy. Controlling the hearth temps after that was anything but easy. We stopped the rake arms to let the poop sit but the ignition point was a close call (as in 30 or less seconds from controlled to out of control, all of which was strictly a judgment call) We had a base level of not exceeding temp limits. 2,000F. Never met while I was there in 3+ years. I saw temps spike in the 2,400F range all of the time and 2,800F more than once. Trust me, we were shoveling the poop down out of the burn hearths as fast as we could.
And that was just poop, from people, at home, with no industrial base to change it. This is why I have no problem with the concept of paper (which burns much better than wet (18% dewatered poop on a very good day) raising temperatures inside the pile. If anything, I'd be questioning if the temps didn't go up quite a bit in the middle of the pile, even to the point of theoretically melting steel.