FALSE?
Why?
They did in fact do testing on primer paint removed from WTC steel.
They did attempt to match the
Tnemec primer paint formulation specified by the NIST.
Dr. Harrit looked into the primer paint claims as well. Here is a brief summary extracted from this letter;
WHY THE RED/GRAY CHIPS ARE NOT PRIMER PAINT-May 2009 ;
I won't recite the whole letter, read it for yourself;
http://11-septembre.com/dossiers/Harrit/primer_paint_Niels_Harrit.pdf
His final conclusion;
Where to begin to deconstruct all the inconsistencies...
First of all, let me repeat the claim that I made that you replied to:
Oystein said:
"FALSE.
For the purpose of their paper [i.e. "Active Thermitic Material..." published at Bentham], they tested paint scraped from the BYU football stadium.
Later, Jones presented test results for primer from WTC perimeter columns - this appears to be very similar to the MEK-treated chip."
In that paper, you find the following passage:
Bentham paper said:
The chips showed significant swelling of the red layer, but with no apparent dissolution. In marked contrast, paint chips softened and partly dissolved when similarly soaked in MEK.
We know from direct conversation with Steven Jones where THAT paint control was sampled:
http://oystein-debate.blogspot.com/2010/11/origin-of-steven-jones-paint-controll.html
Steven Jones said:
We used an epoxy paint used to paint the stadium at BYU, supposing that to be relatively resistant to solvent attack.
Now to your buddies:
Your
Farrer-quote is not referenced, and makes no attempt to specify if that WTC paint from Clarkson College beams was used in any way for the paper "Active Thermitic Material...". If that's what he means, it appears like he is contradicting Dr. Steven Jones. The issue is not resolved at this point and I stand by my original claim: The paint that Harrit, Jones, Farrer e.al. soaked MEK for their paper "Active Thermitic Material..." to compare to one particular chip was not from WTC steel but from the BYU football stadium. It is thus not surprising at all that it exhibits properties different from the MEK-treated red-gray chip, which we believe is Tnemec, whereas the BYU football stadium control paint is very likely some other formulation.
The
Harrit letter does not talk at all about any experiments anyone at all has done on samples of Tnemec from WTC steel. He only compares their well-know data from the red-gray chips with spec data found in the NIST reports and some technical data sheet. Since this letter was published
after "Active Thermitic Material..." was out (in fact, the letter references "ATM..."), you would definitely expect him to mention any testing they had done on WTC Tnemec if they had done any testing on WTC Tnemec. Since the letter mentions no such testing, it seem reasonable to assume that they did in fact NOT test WTC Tnemec as part of the work towards "ATM..."
You apparently forgot by the way that I agree fully with Harrit's conclusion in the letter: Chips a-d are not Tnemec.
MM, could you please read Harrit's works more carefully and tell me if I am correct in my reading!
Speaking of writing dumb stuff, your next statement certainly qualifies.
It doesn't. You just lost focus and forgot what I said and was talking about
From what I have read, the NIST primarily referred to the Tnemec primer paint.
The NIST used Tnemec primer paint and not LaClede primer paint for their primary steel temperature testing.
Yes, so what? What is the relevance of that in the current context?
You have not revealed anything special about LaClede primer that would justify all the emphasis you want to place on it. Your argument appears to be solely based on the simple fact that it was a primer paint that Dr. Harrit et al did not specifically eliminate as a candidate.
Incorrect. If you had read this current thread more carefully, you'd know better than to write such ignorant stuff.
If you study Harrit's letter, the one you linked to in your previos post, you will find that in it he reveals that the red-gray chips contained traces of strontium and chromium. LaClede primer is specified to contain strontium chromate. Amazing, isn't it?
We know from "AMT..." that the main mineraly contained in the red-gray chips a-are aluminium silicate and iron oxide. And surprise surprisem these are the main pigments in LaClede standard primer as per specification.
What's more, Harrit e.al. found manganese in the grey layers. The LaClede steel used for the floor joists that were painted with their standard primer is mostly a grade whose main alloying material is manganes, at around or slighty over 1%.
These are the main reasons that justify the emphasis we put on LaClede paint: It contains exactly the things that Harrit found: aluminium silicate, hematite and strontium chromate in an orgamic matrix.
Strange that you missed all these arguments. I suggest you read this thread from the beginning, or hmm maybe from page 3 on. You will find references to the NIST report and learn where NIST gives us the LaClede primer specification. Then you will know that Tnemec is not everything that NIST talks about, and why Tnemec is not in our focus anymore.
That concern would have some validity, if you could show some test results that even remotely resemble the test observations presented in the Bentham paper.
The test observations presented in the Bentham paper ARE the test results that we need: We compare these results with specifications of LaClede standard primer, which was painted on the floor joists, and find it is an amazing match! That's exactly the same method Harrit used in his letter. Harrit concluded, correctly even though he did not actually test WTC Tnemec, that chips a-d are not WTC Tnemec, because the Bentham paper test results point to a different composition of the paint than the Tnemec that was specified for the perimeter columns. If Harrit had found the specification for LaClede primer in the NIST report and done the exact same study, he surely would have concluded that chips a-d could very well be that other primer. Unfortunately, it seem that Harrit e.al. have not read enough of the NIST report to know that there was at least one other primer that they did not account for, and whose composition matches their test results to a T.
Like Ivan said, "Are you able to understand that hundreds of various paints are available in the market".
Should Dr. Harrit et al, have eliminated each and every one by testing, just to satisfy your desperate need to deny the existence of nano-thermite?
No, of course not No one is saying that.
What they did is equally stupid: They compared with
one (1) paint sample from BYU football stadium and concluded invalidly that all paints in the world, including all that might be used at the WTC, are not the same stuff as chips a-d.
Had you read this thread carefully, you'd have realized by now that Harrit e.al., by only testing one irrelevant other paint, overlooked a very real possibility.
I would suggest the strong bias is your own since you have failed miserably to make any case at all, but continue to pretend otherwise.
MM
Again, you have missed all the main points, facts and arguments raised in this thread. Read it again, read Harrit's letter more carefully, read Farrer's statements more carefully (pay attention to what he
doesn't say!), read "ATM..." more carefully, open your eyes, and eliminate your own bias.