Christopher7
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2006
- Messages
- 6,538
I have said many times on this thread that iron melts at 2800oF and lead vaporized at 3180oF. Don't pretend you have not seen that.Chris 7, When you said,
"You still don't know my position.
It's "iron melted and lead vaporized" establish temperatures far in excess of what office fires can attain."
You still evade the question of what that temperature IS. Is it above the melting point of iron (which is why I threw out the number 2800 degrees F)? What do you believe is the minimum temperature required to create iron-rich spheres?
I said 2800oF in a response to you:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=8037560&postcount=1713C7 said:I do not "take everything RJ Lee says as gospel truth" but I do respect his expertise. The report says iron melted during the event and that requires 2800oF.
Unlike the posters here, RJ Lee knows that fly ash is what goes up the chimney in a coal fired power plant and that most of the fly ash created during the fires would would leave the building with the smoke.Granted, RJ Lee doesn't give a number either, but what he says in his last paragraph is very clear:
"The formation of iron and other type spheres at temperatures obtainable by the combustion of petroleum or coal based fuels is not a new or unique process. These spheres are the same as iron and alumino‐silicate spheres in the well‐studied fly ash formed from contaminants in coal as it is burned in furnaces.
Rich Lee"
ETA: 80 to 90% of the towers were not on fire so none of those sources of spheres, be they rust or office contents, could have been generated until the buildings were pulverized during the collapses.
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