From the posts given, it appears that posters do not feel they have to know what the NIST collapse initiation mechanisms are to claim they are "good enough".
Indeed.
They proved that there is a mechanism that, given initial damage and fire, causes the buildings to collapse.
There was initial damage.
There was fire.
And the buildings collapsed.
That qualifies as "good enough" for me: they didn't need to get every detail right. And it strongly shifts the burden of proof on those claiming there was a demolition, as opposed to a collapse caused by damage and fire, that NIST showed as likely.
I have in past contended your and femr2's assertion that NIST's conclusions would change significantly if they got the initiation mechanisms wrong. NIST's conclusions are stated in chapter 8 (Principal Findings) and chapter 9 (Recommendations) of NCSTAR 1.
Here are, again, all 49 pages of chapter 8 and chapter 9 combined, shown as a single graph. I have highlighted the part of those chapters that would be affected in case you're right about the initiation mechanism in WTC1 and 2.
The highlighted part is
a part of a single phrase that reads:
the column instability propagated to adjacent faces and caused the initiation of the building collapse.
Guess what? The 8 degrees of tilt are
not mentioned at all in the section titled
Principal Findings, proving that that detail is completely accessory and irrelevant to the conclusions and for the purpose of the report. The recommendations NIST made would not change a single bit in case you were right.
I have already noted that in past. Unsurprisingly, your response included no counterargument to the statement that this is the only part of the NIST conclusions affected by your claims.