Carlitos, you apparently haven't heard that it has been proven in the past year that the upper section of WTC 1 tilted at most 1 degree if at all before descending. At that small angle there is no significant horizontal shift. Do the trigonometry if you don't believe it.
The upper section did not tilt to the 8 degrees NIST mentions until after it descended a few stories.
This has been validated by many people in the last year, so it is a bogus argument that the columns would miss each other due to a tilt.
Tony,
Whilst I agree that vertical drop of all four corners of the upper section of WTC 1 ensued after only ~1 degree of rotation, I note that you are repeatedly attributing this observation to not only support your position, but also seem to be implying that the folk responsible for determining that metric agree with you.
You know this is not the case.
You also know that achimspok has generated much of the rotation data, with some also provided by myself, along with the visualisation models you have in mind.
You are continuing to treat the building as a rigid entity. It was not.
You are continuing to ignore lateral rotation and even the potential effect of buckling.
Please don't imply your own personal interpretation of information provided to you as being supported by them-there folk, myself in particular.
You are making the same kind of mistakes that others do when applying the Bazant model literally to the towers.
Even with the small initial angle (which of course continued to increase) there is, in my opinion, no logical situation which should result in any significant axial column impacts.
Add to that that core column impacts have to be transmitted through all manner of flexible structure to be traceable at either the NW corner or roofline of the North face and the chances of capturing the kind of *jolts* you are expecting is, in my opinion, not happenin'.
As you also know, we have identified a number of smaller *mini jolts*.
Again, please make it very clear that what you are saying is your own personal interpretation, not one shared by those responsible for determining the metric you are using.