Are you serious?![]()
What's the rebar from, Big Al?
Those are the supports under the floors! This is 3 or 4 floors pressed together from a KE event of 130 TONS of TNT.
http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/6/981176789.png
see
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Are you serious?![]()
What's the rebar from, Big Al?
But my main question is, where does the rebar come from?
Then it should be easy to find a source.
What's mentioned in this?
“I decided to walk closer to the South Tower. I was about 100 ft from the South Tower looking up when the bodies started coming down. I counted 35. They were just piling up on the Marriott Marquis hotel. They were 10 to 15 thick piling up one after another. You could hear them hitting on the side streets. They were hitting cars, and there were lots of explosions.
“I have seen plenty of death in my life, and burned bodies and so forth, but this was incredible. As I was looking up, I saw a body coming down, hit a lamppost and explode like a paint ball. Its arms and legs got torn off and the head ripped off and bounced right by me.”
http://september11.ceenews.com/ar/
electric_broadway_electrical_supplys/
Smashed.Where is the office furniture?
And the bodies hitting the ground are sourced, you can't find them due to your poor research skills.
The floor systems in the WTC are typical prefabricated light weight concrete on corrugated metal decking. It's standard. You probably wouldn't know if you haven't read any construction related text books, otherwise you wouldn't be complaining about whether or not NIST mentioned it.Were the WTC floor slabs reinforced? I really didn't know that, since neither NIST nor any other source makes any mention of it.
A good test for your expert research skills. Find the source! It might cure your delusions on 911.Well, apparently none of us can find this source, beachnut. So why don't you help us all out, like a good debunker would?
Well, apparently none of us can find this source, beachnut. So why don't you help us all out, like a good debunker would?
The quoted parts do not describe falling bodies sounding like explosions.
Where is the office furniture?
Concrete has a compressive strength of about 200 kg per centimeter... How much do you think furniture has?
Surely you wouldn't be capable of missing a post that was made 6 replies before this one, on the same exact page...Were the WTC concrete floors reinforced with rebar, Grizzly?
No, I believe you do, as none of your other citations provide quotes that liken the bodies falling to the sound of explosions. One likens it to the sound of a watermelon splattering. Is this your idea of an "explosion"?
The quoted parts do not describe falling bodies sounding like explosions.
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110141.PDF page 6
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110095.PDF (PAGE 7)
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110095.PDF (PAGE 7)
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110247.PDF page 5
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110247.PDF page 4
Were the WTC concrete floors reinforced with rebar, Grizzly?