Moderated WTC 1 features list, initiation model / WTC 2 features list, collapse model

Tying those particular jpegs together is a given. When I referred to software I was suggesting tools to enable feature tracing. I informed you that I use SynthEyes. A much more primitive (but free) toolset is available with Tracker.

Not what I asked for 3 weeks ago:
MT
Do you have a link for the NBC and Sauret videos with the frame numbers on them and what fps.




femr2 -With each image being named with the frame number.

Not what I asked for 3 weeks ago:
MT
Do you have a link for the NBC and Sauret videos with the frame numbers on them and what fps.




femr2 - Doubtful, but I'd certainly hope so, as it would be a pretty darn stupid thing to say otherwise.
What's mucho mas estupido to say is that the Towers, on the brink of collapse were demoed instead.
 
Guys, please understand that the Sauret results were reality-checked against the NE view.

Some of us have worked on this for over 7 months. It is not just the Sauret view that we use.

Maybe you debunkers should start cross-checking from other angles too.
 
Hey, dude (BasqueArch), do your own research. I'm not your mother.

How many times have you accused us of lying and manipulating video? And you can't even line up two jpegs to see movement?
 
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Please explain something to an interested layman.Is all this esoteric stuff about an antennae supposed to prove that Dubya blew up the Twin Towers?
 






My bolding
For those of you raising any doubt about the point at which vertical movement of the antenna becomes detectable, I refer you to the following graph...

[qimg]http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/6/980386412.png[/qimg]

With this graph you are able to make an informed decision about where you define T0 to be. It is, of course, always a slightly subjective value, but as you can clearly see, the margin is narrow.

My earlier post stating that the antenna began vertical motion at ~ 1:57.2 in the following video...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_vaYbNZQ5g
...is based upon placing T0 at frame 850 in the graph above.

............
For those of you (no names, BasqueArch) suggesting a timestamp about 3 seconds later, firstly note the sensitivity of the data...it is showing the first pixel of vertical motion, and secondly...any response using methods of poor sensitivity and without data backup will be flatly rejected.

.

Your graph does not support the placement for T0 at frame 850. Look at the deviation of the graph between frame 400 and a bit after 500. Do you believe that the antenna moved up about an inch in that time frame, or could this just be noise? A keyword here is refraction, it is very evident in the videos, combined with recording artifacts. How do you think this could affect the accuracy of your sub pixel tracking?

I would say that BasqueArch is fully justified to place the T0 at the beginning of visible movements. You and Major_Toms claims about invisible movements is not justified by the quality of the source data.

I disagree. I'll add a teeny bit of detail in a mo...
Norseman]Quote:
Look at the deviation of the graph between frame 400 and a bit after 500. Do you believe that the antenna moved up about an inch in that time frame, or could this just be noise?
femr2
It's probably a noise source.

MT claims that 9.5 seconds prior to start of collapse the antenna began a hook and drop (suggested result of core demolition) T 0 = frame 850-9.5 sec x 29.97 fps= frame 565

For the last minute, the core and perimeter columns were continually settling due to plane and fire damage. However this graph shows at frame 565 onwards, a rise of 0.2 pixels x 9.6”/pixel = 1.9” instead of an expected continuous drop into negative territory.
Therefore noise is at least the margin of error of +-0.2 pixels. The subpixel drop of the antenna therefore is not established with certainty until at least frame 910 when the +- 0.2 minimum noise margin of error boundary is passed at -0.2 pixels.

Therefore the start of subpixel antenna falling cannot be established with certainty at frame 850 but at frame 910 , a 60 frame difference / 29.97 fps = 2.0 seconds after femr2 claims T0 subpixel drop before visual drop, and is at most 1 second instead of 3.
 
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How would the constants of proportionality you suggest change the argument for deformation? Would it? Linear relations still hold over the first few degrees, so points a, b and r must still move according to a set, fixed relation for rigidity to be maintained. They do not move together as multiple drop curves show from at least 2 views.
I have not suggested any "constants of proportionality". The Membership Agreement does not allow me to state my opinion of your use of linear approximations for sine and cosine functions. The relationships between the vertical coordinates of points a, b, and r are approximately linear for small angles of tilt, but you have miscalculated somewhere.

I don't know where you made your mistake(s). You haven't given me a reason to care.

WDC, in your calculation what is the upward angle the viewing line makes with the horizontal? The upward angle of viewing is very important and I don't see it mentioned anywhere in your post. An incorrect upward viewing angle would change the whole result.
I calculated the actual drops and differences (as did Myriad, despite his use of the word "apparent"). Those numbers are independent of the observer.

WDC, I am looking at your rotational tranformation and I see nothing about the viewer looking up at a 12 degree angle. Where do you include this info in your calculation?

Do you assume the viewer is looking horizontally? I hope not.
I assumed nothing about the viewer or angle of view.

If your graph was supposed to be observer-dependent, then you mislabelled the vertical axis. A difference in meters is an objective measure. There are no relativistic velocities here, so lengths and differences between lengths are the same for all observers.

If we use your slope, we get pretty absurd angle readings. You predict about a 15 degree slope by frame 260?
You appear to be speaking about my "slope" as though it were a single number. If that is true, then you don't know what you're talking about.

My calculations used sine and cosine functions, not small-angle linear approximations. I showed my work, so you have no excuse for thinking the curves I calculated were linear. Those curves will probably appear linear to a careless or untrained eye, but their non-linearity can (just barely) be seen at the resolution of my graph. If you can't see the non-linearity, then I suggest you use my calculations to create an equivalent graph with greater resolution, print it out, and hold a straight-edge against the curve on your printed paper. Holding a straight-edge against the monitor screen isn't good enough.

Please plug your slope into the linked plots and try to predict the antenna tilt with it.
Why? You haven't given me a reason to care.

I wouldn't have done this calculation at all if Myriad hadn't posted a typo in his last number. I was curious about that number, so I did the calculation independently. That took about ten minutes. Having done that, I figured I might as well post a correction/confirmation for Myriad's calculation.

It took about twenty minutes to create the graph in my previous post and to copy it to my web site for display here. That's about twenty minutes more effort than your responses deserved.

I will note, however, that if you have been using your calculation of a-b to infer the tilt, then you've been underestimating the tilt by an order of magnitude.

Some of us have worked on this for over 7 months.
:rolleyes:

Hey, dude (BasqueArch), do your own research. I'm not your mother.
I leave you to your own "research".
 
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Hey, dude (BasqueArch), do your own research. I'm not your mother.

Please plug your slope into the linked plots and try to predict the antenna tilt with it.

Hey dude, W.D.Clinger is not your mother. :p



"To a truther, having double standards simply means they're better than the average person, because they have twice as many standards."- CI1mh4224rd
 
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WDC post 666 (hmmm...666?)): "I calculated the actual drops and differences (as did Myriad, despite his use of the word "apparent"). Those numbers are independent of the observer."

THen how are they useful from the Sauret perspective? I bet if you rotate by 12 degrees clockwise and then apply the theta rotation you plots and the plots of this researcher (it's not me) will look ver similar.

WDC: "I assumed nothing about the viewer or angle of view."

That is what I thought. Why compare your plot with the one I present if you hadn't. You are comparing apples and oranges. Why plot them together? Obviously the plot I posted will be of a greater slope at all points than yours after a 12 degree rotation is added.

WDC: "You appear to be speaking about my "slope" as though it were a single number. If that is true, then you don't know what you're talking about.

My calculations used sine and cosine functions, not small-angle linear approximations. I showed my work, so you have no excuse for thinking the curves I calculated were linear. Those curves will probably appear linear to a careless or untrained eye, but their non-linearity can (just barely) be seen at the resolution of my graph. If you can't see the non-linearity, then I suggest you use my calculations to create an equivalent graph with greater resolution, print it out, and hold a straight-edge against the curve on your printed paper. Holding a straight-edge against the monitor screen isn't good enough."

Have you looked closely at the plots I posted? They appear linear to the untrained eye, too. They are not. They are just blown up sinusoidal curves over 0 to 3.5 degrees.

I used the term "linear" as a simplification. I won't do that anymore. All plots shown are just stretched sinusoudal curves and tilt is inferred graphically by comparing the curve to the real measurements.

I'll rework the scale in meters. It seems the only complaint you have is the scaling in meters?

Is that true? When we blow all the hot air out of your last post, scaling in meters from a viewpoint of 12 degrees looking up is the only complaint?

WDC: "It took about twenty minutes to create the graph in my previous post and to copy it to my web site for display here. That's about twenty minutes more effort than your responses deserved.

I will note, however, that if you have been using your calculation of a-b to infer the tilt, then you've been underestimating the tilt by an order of magnitude."

We can take a model, rotate it from the Sauret perspective and check results. Do you honestly believe what you are saying? Will the results be off by an order of magnitude?

The points a, b are just points on a rotating and translating stick. How hard can it be to give a reality check to your results before posting them? Let's check your claim. We will rotate that same stick by 12 degrees away from the viewer and tilt it over 3 degrees, plotting the a-b convergence as a function of angle. Let's see how close you come to reality.
 
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WDC: "I assumed nothing about the viewer or angle of view."

You did without realizing it. Your answers are valid if the viewer is looking at 0 degrees to the horizontal. I'm sure the researcher who did this would never try to determine tilt from the Sauret viewpoint if we were looking from 0 degrees horizontally because there wouldn't be enough drop to work with from 0 to 3 degrees.

Both you and Myriad are drastically underestimating the amount of drop to work with from 0 to 3 degrees by placing the viewer horizontal to the object viewed.

It is that 12 degree difference that gives us enough drop per unit angle change to estimate tilt in the first place. By ignoring perspective, you paint the worst possible scenario for estimating angle from a-b convergence. There is no worse possible viewing angle than horizontal.

It gets easier the more you are looking upward.

We can totally ignore scale and work solutions from basic stick, vector models if you wish. The issue is the appearance of a, b convergence from the correct viewing angle, and comparison with known measurements.

Here is the math problem here we can ignore the building and focus only on the movement of the 3 points:

3 vector are drawn from the 98th floor axis of rotation to each of the 3 points, let's call the vectors a, b and r.

When looked at from the side, it is identical to a clock with 3 hands of different lengths pointing in the direction of each point a, b and r.

Now we ignore the building and we have only 3 vectors in space. We rotate the whole clock about it's center point 12 degrees clockwise so all hands turn together 12 degrees.


At this point we place a viewer in the far horizon to the left and ask: How does this viewer see the points a and b converge as the clock is further rotated from 12 to 15 degrees?

This is the convergence we want. Both you and Myriad are working the same problem but you forgot to rotate the vector group 12 degrees first. By doing so you choose the worst possible angle to view the convergence.

This is identical to what WDC did but he he never rotated the clock first. Obviously our convergence will be much steeper if we rotate by 12 degrees first.
 
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Here is a another model rotating only 1 degree from the Sauret viewpoint. NW corner.

measure.gif



Obviously we can scale perceived drop vs angle tilt from 0 to 3 degrees using this model.

If we were not looking at 12 degrees upward but rather from the horizontal, we could never have enough drop per angle tilt to do this.

Do you and Myriad really believe that we cannot determine angle from drop in the Sauret perspective? Even if we map it next to a rotating model and compare?

Can you imagine how small the drop would be if we did not have that 12 degree angle? (Yes, you can. That is what you really calculated. It is small to the point of uselessness, as you have shown.)


WDC, do you really believe that BS order of magnitude claim in you last post?

A little reality check to order of magnitude: Do you honestly believe we are off by a factor of 10? Are you expecting 5 degree north wall tilt? Because we measure about 0.5, totally consistent with the model of the NW corner compared with the actual movement I showed previously.

We are in the correct range. You are off on cloud #9.
 
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technobabble vs solid geometry, part 4

Major_Tom refuses to use quote tags, so we can't find the context by tracing back through the quotations. For reference:

I used the term "linear" as a simplification. I won't do that anymore. All plots shown are just stretched sinusoudal curves and tilt is inferred graphically by comparing the curve to the real measurements.
So all your talk of linearity, "small angle approximation", "differential" coordinates, Taylor series, Maclaurin series, "dropping the second order term and above", "1 degree of freedom equation of motion for a simple pendulum", and "sin(theta)=theta" was just irrelevant technobabble.

Who could have known?

The points a, b are just points on a rotating and translating stick. How hard can it be to give a reality check to your results before posting them? Let's check your claim. We will rotate that same stick by 12 degrees away from the viewer and tilt it over 3 degrees, plotting the a-b convergence as a function of angle. Let's see how close you come to reality.

WDC: "I assumed nothing about the viewer or angle of view."

You did without realizing it. Your answers are valid if the viewer is looking at 0 degrees to the horizontal. I'm sure the researcher who did this would never try to determine tilt from the Sauret viewpoint if we were looking from 0 degrees horizontally because there wouldn't be enough drop to work with from 0 to 3 degrees.

Both you and Myriad are drastically underestimating the amount of drop to work with from 0 to 3 degrees by placing the viewer horizontal to the object viewed.

It is that 12 degree difference that gives us enough drop per unit angle change to estimate tilt in the first place. By ignoring perspective, you paint the worst possible scenario for estimating angle from a-b convergence. There is no worse possible viewing angle than horizontal.

It gets easier the more you are looking upward.

We can totally ignore scale and work solutions from basic stick, vector models if you wish. The issue is the appearance of a, b convergence from the correct viewing angle, and comparison with known measurements.

Here is the math problem here we can ignore the building and focus only on the movement of the 3 points:

3 vector are drawn from the 98th floor axis of rotation to each of the 3 points, let's call the vectors a, b and r.

When looked at from the side, it is identical to a clock with 3 hands of different lengths pointing in the direction of each point a, b and r.

Now we ignore the building and we have only 3 vectors in space. We rotate the whole clock about it's center point 12 degrees clockwise so all hands turn together 12 degrees.


At this point we place a viewer in the far horizon to the left and ask: How does this viewer see the points a and b converge as the clock is further rotated from 12 to 15 degrees?

This is the convergence we want. Both you and Myriad are working the same problem but you forgot to rotate the vector group 12 degrees first. By doing so you choose the worst possible angle to view the convergence.

This is identical to what WDC did but he he never rotated the clock first. Obviously our convergence will be much steeper if we rotate by 12 degrees first.
So you chose to express drop distances and differences between drop distances by calculating the "drops" in a direction other than vertical.

Given your apparent absence of purpose, that makes perfect sense.
 
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WDC POST 671: "So all your talk of linearity, "small angle approximation", "differential" coordinates, Taylor series, Maclaurin series, "dropping the second order term and above", "1 degree of freedom equation of motion for a simple pendulum", and "sin(theta)=theta" was just irrelevant technobabble."

I'll edit out all reference to linearity over the weekend. I don't need it.

We will only work with the stretched sinusoidal curve instead, just like you.

What about your own false claim about the order of magnitude difference? Pretty silly claim from your calculations which don't account for the 12 degree upward angle of viewing, no?

Why compare your curve with mine if you do not account for the 12 degrees? Could you edit that to correct your mistake?

If I remove reference to linearity, do you have any other criticism?


After you correct your mistake, could you address the arguments for deformity which depend upon relative shapes of curves only?
 
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As I mentioned: "Here is the math problem here we can ignore the building and focus only on the movement of the 3 points:

3 vector are drawn from the 98th floor axis of rotation to each of the 3 points, let's call the vectors a, b and r.

When looked at from the side, it is identical to a clock with 3 hands of different lengths pointing in the direction of each point a, b and r.

Now we ignore the building and we have only 3 vectors in space. We rotate the whole clock about it's center point 12 degrees clockwise so all hands turn together 12 degrees.


At this point we place a viewer in the far horizon to the left and ask: How does this viewer see the points a and b converge as the clock is further rotated from 12 to 15 degrees?"



Considering that the researcher simply stretched the same sinusoidal wave you did to estimate tilt, but correctly accounted for the 12 degree upward viewing angle, unlike you and Myriad, my guess is that if you subject your own calculation to a 12 degree rotation, our curves will match swimmingly. I can remove all reference to linearity without having to update the researchers graphs, since he never depended upon an claim of linearity in the construction of it.

Can you update your rotation to include the 12 degree viewing angle or remove the plots where you compare the two curves, since it is highly deceiving to compare your plot with mine.


If we use the 3 vectors described above, rigid constraints are simply that the 3 vectors remain fixed relative to one another in angle and magnitude as the clock is rotated from 12 to 15 degrees.

The plots of building movements show the 3 points do not rotate together as a rigid body. This is observable in the shape of the data. Antenna drop must correspond to a drop in the NW corner and the SW corner. The magnitudes of perceived drop will be different, but they must move together. One cannot begin to move downward 70 frames before another. This is verifiable from at least two viewpoints.

The relative shape of the drop curves prove deviation from rigidity. Do you have a problem with this simple argument?
 
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drops1.jpg


Can you please state that your curve can be applied to a viewer at 0 degrees horizontal viewing angle, while my slope is for a 12 degree upward viewing angle? Sinusoidal stretching, just like yours.

In fact, why not check to see if our curves are identical if yours undergoes the correct rotation for viewing angle?

Isn't is an amazing coincidence that our plots are about the same (both being stretched sinusoidal curves) but differ only in slope at any particular point? Could they actually be identical plots, just viewed from a 12 degree difference?
 
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Is it me or in Major Tom's posts getting even harder to follow?

Now he's referring to himself in the third party. I am assuming that he's referring to his "research" and not something he had nothing to do with and is simply selling.
 
WDC: "So you chose to express drop distances and differences between drop distances by calculating the "drops" in a direction other than vertical."

From the Sauret persepective. How would you find the relation between drop vs angle from the Sauret perspective. Is not comparison with a model undergoing rigid rotation good enough?

Basically, that is exactly what was done. That is exactly what the curves show. On the left is a model undergoing rigid rotation and on the right is the actual data.

If you were to drop any reference to distance scaling on the vertical axis, the results are identical. Model on left, reality on right.

The left side was not derived using algebra, but by rotating the rigid object in question. I'll gladly delete the vertical meter scale if that is what you want. The curves and tilt angle predictions remain the same.
 
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Guys, please understand that the Sauret results were reality-checked against the NE view.

Some of us have worked on this for over 7 months. It is not just the Sauret view that we use.

Maybe you debunkers should start cross-checking from other angles too.

You realize there's no direct correlation between the length of time you've worked on a problem and the correct solution of the problem?
 
Is it me or in Major Tom's posts getting even harder to follow?

Major_Tom's total refusal to use to use quote tags - after many hints and straight requests - seems to have approached the level of phobia. It's a mystery.

Major_Tom -- why will you not use the quote function? It enables people to click easily back through the history of the exchange, and makes things much clearer post-by-post.
 

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