Tony,
You go from one FALSE assumption (building in "as built, pristine condition") to another FALSE assumption ("all 12 beams removed").
Typical.
Why don't you try doing it with the RIGHT number of beams in place & removed.
Then publish your methods, not just unreliable results.
I've seen your calculations, Tony.
They are about as reliable as your assurance that the concrete could not possibly fail before the studs shear.
That was wrong, too.
"No way?"
Inept assertion for a building that is in the process of massively failing. Based on the idiocy of quoting the "as built" dimensions & constraints of components.
Write up & publish your nonsense.
Nice lie, Tony.
I never said anything of the sort (in the bold).
I said that the whole question of shear studs failing on that girder was meaningless, because there were no shear studs on that girder.
I said that, if there had been shear studs on that girder, then the failure mode for the shear stud & concrete composite would have been the concrete fracturing.
And my last post proves it. As does NIST's calculations.
It's pointless arguing with you, Tony.
Like everyone else who knows what they are talking about, I've reached the end of my patience with your idiocy.
I'm not likely to waste any more time on you.
You are simply incompetent at big-picture, mature, experienced mechanical engineering judgment.
Tom, you are talking a lot of smack here but not much substance.
The girder between columns 76 and 79 would buckle by the time it pushed column 79 just 1.6 inches to the east if it were unrestrained by the 12 beams framing into it with shear studs.
You go from one FALSE assumption (building in "as built, pristine condition") to another FALSE assumption ("all 12 beams removed").
Typical.
Why don't you try doing it with the RIGHT number of beams in place & removed.
Then publish your methods, not just unreliable results.
I did the calculation and that is at room temperature. If it is hot it buckles earlier. There is no way you can get 4.5 inches of eastward movement the way you envision.
I've seen your calculations, Tony.
They are about as reliable as your assurance that the concrete could not possibly fail before the studs shear.
That was wrong, too.
There is no way you can get 4.5 inches of eastward movement the way you envision.
"No way?"
Inept assertion for a building that is in the process of massively failing. Based on the idiocy of quoting the "as built" dimensions & constraints of components.
The reality is that, both the original NIST scenario and your alternative, for the girder failure at column 79, are impossible.
Write up & publish your nonsense.
You can just chalk it up to not looking hard enough before saying it. Sort of like what you did with your claim that the concrete would fail before the shear studs on girder G1 before the beams to the east of girder G1 buckled.
Nice lie, Tony.
I never said anything of the sort (in the bold).
I said that the whole question of shear studs failing on that girder was meaningless, because there were no shear studs on that girder.
I said that, if there had been shear studs on that girder, then the failure mode for the shear stud & concrete composite would have been the concrete fracturing.
And my last post proves it. As does NIST's calculations.
It's pointless arguing with you, Tony.
Like everyone else who knows what they are talking about, I've reached the end of my patience with your idiocy.
I'm not likely to waste any more time on you.
You are simply incompetent at big-picture, mature, experienced mechanical engineering judgment.
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