Thank-you for
illustrating the reason I have been highlighting the
actual behaviour, to make sure folk understand what
actually happened...
No. That is NOT what happened.
This is...
http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/5/2/69989840.gif
http://femr2.ucoz.com/lateperimeterpeel.gif
The bolt seams fractured cleanly, the bowed columns sprang-back into shape, and the staggered outline (
highlighted here in purple) is there for all to see. (This section ends up speared in the ground later, in two halves iirc)
This behaviour has been discussed many times. Why is it that you are still seemingly oblivious ?
Pages of it within the MT threads. Pages here.
It is that you post images such as...
http://www.formauri.es/personal/pgimeno/xfiles/cache/Bazant-Fig2.png
...which highlights your misinterpretation of what you think ocurred, and a good chunk of recent discussion has been about showing that such a 3-point buckling mode is not what happened.
As I've said, many times now (though seemingly without touching the sides for some)...
As long as everyone is fully aware of the fact that the break along the East face of WTC2 occurred along the bolt seams, resulting in the break following the pattern
highlighted here in purple it's all good.
NIST regularly state..."the east wall buckled inward"...which is a poor description imo.
There is one reference (in two summary tables) within the NIST report...
Column splices failed at every third panel and columns sprung back from inward bowing
...but it is not discussed in any detail, and is not repeated further. Needless to say, it's not accurate either, as the splices failed at every panel in the staggered outline continnually being referenced, not every third, though the columns did indeed spring back from inward bowing.
As ozeco41 said recently, regarding this behaviour...