There are three possible explanations for what
Major_Tom has said above and below:
- I have made the statement he alleges but have forgotten all about it, which seems unlikely.
- Major_Tom just made it up.
- Major_Tom is just confused.
Since
Major_Tom can't seem to come up with a direct quote, everyone should assume some combination of explanations 2 and 3.
Your earlier comments comparing the results of the NIST with the results of femr seem pretty meaningless unless you ignore the problems outlined in the last 2 pages.
Major_Tom has just confirmed that explanation 1 is not the correct explanation, so the explanation must be some combination of explanations 2 and 3.
And what do you make of the arguments of Femr2 and MT regarding the angle of the CBS footage?
I haven't been following your back-and-forth with
femr2 in detail, so I don't know exactly what you're asking, but I'm unlikely to have an opinion. Some of
femr2's claims are spot on, some of
femr2's claims are false or nonsense, but most of
femr2's claims are so inconsequential that the effort needed to form an opinion cannot be justified.
You really are making a bit of a fool of yourself you know. This is trivially simple stuff. Wasting my time because you can't eveb read a graph ? Jeebus.
A lot of the problem here is that
femr2 posts graphs instead of numbers, forcing anyone who cares to reverse-engineer the numbers from which he constructed his graphs.
The level of accuracy is perfectly adequate for the purposes of an engineering report on structural failure.
True.
ROFL. Just stop eh. No, it's not the same information. 12-76 is a position/time graph, mine is a datapoint separation/datapoint pair graph. Different information.
False. The information in
femr2's graph is a proper subset of the information in NIST's Figure 12-76.
In other words: All of the information in
femr2's graph is already present in NIST's Figure 12-76, but Figure 12-76 contains additional information that is not present in
femr2's graph.
That does not imply that
femr2's graph is entirely worthless, because a graph that displays some particular aspect of Figure 12-76 while suppressing irrelevant details may help viewers to understand some particular point that
femr2 might be attempting to make. In this case as in many others, however,
femr2 relied overmuch on others' ability to infer the meaning of his graph from an overly succinct caption instead of augmenting his graph with a clear statement in prose of what the graph shows.
I have to agree with
alienentity on this point:
alienentity said:
If you were presenting this at a lecture, it would be very confusing to most people at first glance. I suspect you haven't done much public presentation, because you wouldn't present your data that way if you had.