Also, they didn't collapse in the same way. Predictably, the building with damage lower in the structure, which had more mass above the damaged area, collapsed much more quickly than the one with the same damage higher up. Exactly as one would expect given the differences in the crashes.
I would have expected otherwise. Why do you think the one with more mass collapsed sooner than the one with less mass?
I would have expected otherwise. Why do you think the one with more mass collapsed sooner than the one with less mass?
is that a trick question? you cant possibly be this ignorant as to why.
I would have expected otherwise. Why do you think the one with more mass collapsed sooner than the one with less mass?
Dave Rodgers - Willful Irrelevance is a great phrase. Captures the truther mindset nicely.
Seriously? You can't understand how more mass (and therefore pressure, weight, etc.) would result in a faster structural failure, as opposed to less?
I think Intentional Ignorance would fit better.![]()
Obviously, it wouldn't be a conspiracy otherwise would it? You figured out that part on your own or did Bill O'Reilly whisper it in your ear?
Because 50 stories of skyscraper has more mass than 20 stories of skyscraper.
50 stories pushing down on a weakened section of the structure will result in faster "failure creep" than 20 stories.
As I said, you should talk to a structural engineer. He'll set you straight.
a) The structure is progressively stronger as you go down or progressively weaker as you go up, whichever way you want to look at it. This compensates for the added weight.
It's not the not joining in part that's rude, it's the joining in and then totally disregarding my comment as if I'd written something entirely different and on top of that make references to historical positions held by truthers. Which is no way the position I'm showing in this conversation.
To a degree. But you have to remember that, first, this stronger structure was designed to support a static load, not a dynamic one of the same mass. Second, and most crucial, you cannot state "This compensates for the added weight" because you don't know the numbers.
I don't know them either, but since my interpretation matches what was observed, and yours does not, mine is more likely to be correct.
Last but not least the collapse initiated by the buckling of the floor structures and their pancake collapse which later brought down the inner and outer structures on them. The floor structures are the same all along the tower. So it should present no difference if the impact is higher or lower. The buckling of the floor structures struts has nothing to do with the mass on top of it(of floors that don't load directly on the floor planes).
Bogus you're just trying to do some spin to put your position on top. Clearly the structures are stronger in the bottom floors. How much? Well look up the floor plans. Dynamic load? That counts after collapse initiates. Prior to that there are still the other points: more structural integrity in the lower impact point, harder to heat up beams because they are thicker and well the issue pointed out in d), which you haven't addressed yet.
Unfortunately your interpretation does NOT match what was observed and reported by NIST.
If any of these structures fail, then they all fail. Take out a floor, and the outer columns are required to take on far more than they are designed for. Add the fact that the columns are damaged, and you've got an even bigger problem.
Finally, add the additional complication of the floor sagging and actuallly pulling the outer columns inward, and you've got a collapse that can't be stopped.
I would have expected otherwise. Why do you think the one with more mass collapsed sooner than the one with less mass?
c) Thicker structural columns in the lower level are stronger and being thicker harder to heat up by the same fire source, there's no indication that there was considerably more fuel sources in those floors than any other
My interpretation predicts that the building with damage further down in the structure would tend to collapse first.
What was observed? Was it in fact the first to collapse?