Richard Gage Blueprint for Truth Rebuttals on YouTube by Chris Mohr

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What it looks like to me is that you are all too often repeating what you have been told to say regardless of how well you truly understand what it is you are talking about.

MM
...claimed MM, without providing a shred of evidence.

I'm betting you don't understand what he's saying, and you're projecting, so the problem is clearly in his end. I'm not sure why, since it's fairly simple logic. Maybe the fact that it points out Chris7's claims are self-contradictory is preventing your comprehension.
 
Much of what you say here has already been answered: others have taken BETTER (not perfet) measurements of the collapse than NIST did, and those measurements show above-and-below freefall varying rates. The 1.89 seconds of less than freefall almost perfectly matches the buckling time in the NIST Report; falling backwards or inside is the same from a camera point of view... And as for my last question, sorry if it seemed insulting but from my point of view it sounds like you are either saying that the 1.89 seconds was not a real drop, or if it was, the bombs would have had to do their work almost two seconds into the collapse. Are you explaining this by denying that the slower Phase One of the collapse never really happened?
In Figure 12-62, the columns on the west wall have buckled about 20 feet. The roofline is level so the north, west and east walls have descended about 20 feet. That is more than the 7 feet of descent claimed by NIST in the 1.75 seconds of Stage 1 and therefore it was occurring during the period of FFA.
 
In Figure 12-62, the columns on the west wall have buckled about 20 feet. The roofline is level so the north, west and east walls have descended about 20 feet. That is more than the 7 feet of descent claimed by NIST in the 1.75 seconds of Stage 1 and therefore it was occurring during the period of FFA.

Meaning exactly nothing.

Keep it up!
 
Post 4155, Glenn B explains that "1-9 Vol II states that all exterior columns had buckled "within approximately 2 seconds" of onset of collapse. This matches almost precisely the beginning of Stage 2, as per their graphs."

All exterior columns buckle over a two-second period according to NIST. That's Stage One. FFA in Stage 2 is after all columns have buckled.

This I understand. I do not understand what Chris7 is trying to say.
 
What it looks like to me is that you are all too often repeating what you have been told to say regardless of how well you truly understand what it is you are talking about.

MM
See post 4213. Here I bring to the table info from a neutral structural engineer which appears to agree more with Chris7 than with Tom TFK. We'll see how it all shakes down. I'm hoping I can follow up with other questions but am not sure what to ask.

When is the last time you brought something to the table that appears to support natural collapse? Thanks MM for your kind support always,

Chris
 
See post 4213. Here I bring to the table info from a neutral structural engineer which appears to agree more with Chris7 than with Tom TFK. We'll see how it all shakes down. I'm hoping I can follow up with other questions but am not sure what to ask.

My impression is that part of the problem is that the NIST report is ambiguous as to whether "column buckling" means buckling of two-floor column sections, buckling and/or fracture at the column splices between those sections, or all of the above. If I am reading correctly, 1-9 p. 476 says that column splices weren't modeled in the ANSYS model at all (but they were in the LS-DYNA model). Maybe I'm at least providing a clue here....
 
See post 4213. Here I bring to the table info from a neutral structural engineer which appears to agree more with Chris7 than with Tom TFK. We'll see how it all shakes down. I'm hoping I can follow up with other questions but am not sure what to ask.

When is the last time you brought something to the table that appears to support natural collapse? Thanks MM for your kind support always,

Chris

The neutral engineer says CD, or fire? If he says CD, he is nuts, like Gage is.
 
Post 4155, Glenn B explains that "1-9 Vol II states that all exterior columns had buckled "within approximately 2 seconds" of onset of collapse. This matches almost precisely the beginning of Stage 2, as per their graphs."

All exterior columns buckle over a two-second period according to NIST. That's Stage One. FFA in Stage 2 is after all columns have buckled.

This I understand. I do not understand what Chris7 is trying to say.

Don't feel bad. I don't think even Chris understands what he is trying to say.
 
Beachnut,
Huh? I asked him about buckling, not CD or fire. He has no idea this is a 9/11 related question, that's why he's truly neutral.
 
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Beachnut,
Huh? I asked him about buckling, not CD or fire. He has no idea this is a 9/11 related question, that's why he's truly neutral.
Huh? Does fire and heat damage change things? Your questions seem to be based on standard day, room temperature.

Huh? I was interested in his position on the delusional CD claims made by 911 truth nuts. (bet they don't let anyone talk CT insanity) You can be truly neutral and call the idiotic claims made by the scam artist like Gage, idiotic claims. You can make that call using truly neutral knowledge. There is no need to be neutral with Gage, his claims are the stuff of insanity, but he sure is personable as he lies knowingly or unknowingly.

Your neutral engineer sites this truther web site as the word on steel at high temperature. http://911research.wtc7.net/wtc/analysis/fires/steel.html
An Expert who uses a web site of woo. Although you could find some info from the nut who runs the site, many of his statements are nonsense.
Yet even when steel structures are heated to those temperatures, they never disintegrate into piles of rubble, as did the Twin Towers and Building 7.
Neutral? Like Gage? I like the video, and know why my 2x4 buckled, and my 6x6 did not...
 
Huh? Does fire and heat damage change things? Your questions seem to be based on standard day, room temperature.

Huh? I was interested in his position on the delusional CD claims made by 911 truth nuts. (bet they don't let anyone talk CT insanity) You can be truly neutral and call the idiotic claims made by the scam artist like Gage, idiotic claims. You can make that call using truly neutral knowledge. There is no need to be neutral with Gage, his claims are the stuff of insanity, but he sure is personable as he lies knowingly or unknowingly.

Your neutral engineer sites this truther web site as the word on steel at high temperature. http://911research.wtc7.net/wtc/analysis/fires/steel.html
An Expert who uses a web site of woo. Although you could find some info from the nut who runs the site, many of his statements are nonsense. Neutral? Like Gage? I like the video, and know why my 2x4 buckled, and my 6x6 did not...
Well Beachnut I am floored. I certainly expected a neutral answer from a Structural Engineering forum like this, and the fact that he quoted from a 9/11 Truth website takes away his neutrality. I obviously had no idea this guy had this kind of connection to 9/11 Truth (note to MM, Ergo, Chris7: "non-neutral" doesn't mean wrong or woo, it just means he is a participant in the 9/11 debate and therefore not neutral). Thanks Beachnut for catching this. I have the same questions out on another forum; we'll see what comes back from that. In the meantime, your research kind of knocked the wind out of me, in a good way.
 
Well Beachnut I am floored. I certainly expected a neutral answer from a Structural Engineering forum like this, and the fact that he quoted from a 9/11 Truth website takes away his neutrality. I obviously had no idea this guy had this kind of connection to 9/11 Truth (note to MM, Ergo, Chris7: "non-neutral" doesn't mean wrong or woo, it just means he is a participant in the 9/11 debate and therefore not neutral). Thanks Beachnut for catching this. I have the same questions out on another forum; we'll see what comes back from that. In the meantime, your research kind of knocked the wind out of me, in a good way.
I am not saying his information on buckling is wrong.

I think he gave you a neutral answer. I found it ironic he cited a woo site on heat and steel.

I don't think he misled you. There are plenty of source to research buckling...

I only found it ironic, the source he cited on another occasion. That said, there is data that is right, even in source which are kind of woo-ish.
 
Looks like this is an argument over engineering terminology rather than anything more serious...

Well Beachnut I am floored. I certainly expected a neutral answer from a Structural Engineering forum like this, and the fact that he quoted from a 9/11 Truth website takes away his neutrality. I obviously had no idea this guy had this kind of connection to 9/11 Truth (note to MM, Ergo, Chris7: "non-neutral" doesn't mean wrong or woo, it just means he is a participant in the 9/11 debate and therefore not neutral). Thanks Beachnut for catching this. I have the same questions out on another forum; we'll see what comes back from that. In the meantime, your research kind of knocked the wind out of me, in a good way.

Well, I'm obviously not "neutral" at all but I'd support the responses you got from this other fellow, no matter what his leanings are:

1) My limited understanding was that column buckling and column breakage were two different things...They are.

This is correct. In some situations a column that buckles, i.e. is loaded to the point of instability -- after which it only provides a minimal amount of support to the load -- only displaces a small amount. This would be the case if there were many other columns with sufficient reserve capacity, and stiff enough beams, to carry a concentrated load. Provided the buckled column only strains a little bit and remains elastic, once the load is removed it will regain most or all of its former strength.

A column that buckles under a load that is not carried by other members, on the other hand, will almost surely fracture in short order.

If a building is collapsing and the support columns are "buckling," can that term apply to columns that are breaking at the welded connections and/or bolts breaking...No!

Well, maybe. There's a lot going on here. Since we're talking about a building that is collapsing, columns that buckle are almost certainly going to break as well. But the term buckling does not describe the actual rupture of welds or bolt failures.

There is also plastic buckling, different from elastic buckling, that applies in certain situations. In plastic buckling there will be some damage, probably appearing first at the connections. Yet it is still not correct vocabulary-wise to equate plastic buckling with rupture.

or does buckling specifically refer only to a column that is bending at something like a right angle until it loses most of its strength?...buckling refers to a column which has reached a critical load (Euler's formula) and becomes unstable.

I don't follow the question. A column usually buckles long before reaching a 90-degree bend. The answer above is correct -- when a column reaches its critical load and becomes unstable, i.e. any further displacement leads to a rapid decrease in its strength, it is said to have buckled.

2) From the point of view of loss of strength, does a badly bent column have much more resistance than a column that has snapped apart at its welded connections? Does a completely bent column have less than 5% of its initial strength? Less than 2%?...A column which has buckled is not badly bent. If load is removed, it will regain its initial shape and strength. If load is not removed, it will collapse. During collapse, it will probably become badly bent.

Again, there are situations where a buckled column has gone plastic and will not regain its previous shape and strength, but the answer above is close.

You cannot meaningfully compare a buckled but intact column to a column that has snapped under load -- the first has reached a point of instability, but still behaves according to the same governing stress-strain equations; whereas the other has undergone a sudden structural change, and its behavior is accordingly discontinuous.

3) I'm somewhat familiar with Euler's theorem and am aware that this is a purely mathematical construct...no, it is not. It is accurate for slender columns within the elastic range.

The Euler buckling equation is often an overestimate in real situations, but it is a pretty good model in many cases. I would not deprecate it as purely mathematical.

In the real world, if a column is suffering from major stresses during a building collapse, is it likely that it would "buckle" by bending in half, or would it be much more likely to snap apart at the welded connections or other weaker spots? Depends what is causing the building collapse. If a column is buckling, that would trigger a partial or complete building collapse.

Lots of possible "real world" effects here. A buckled column that cannot transfer its load (as in a building collapse) will rupture. This rupture is likely to happen at the ends and midpoint of the column, but there may also be other forces involved, not to mention impacts. Failure at the connections is likely in modern steel-frame construction. This is particularly true for bolted connections.

4) Is this a good working definition of "buckling"? The term buckle refers to the instant in time that the column assembly goes unstable...that is a pretty good definition.

Minor nitpick, "buckle" does not describe a moment in time, it describes the behavior of the column. That behavior is the column instability. But keep in mind the instability is not "it's gonna fall over," rather it describes the slope of the stress-strain curve reversing. In practical terms this means that even if weight is removed once the column starts to buckle, it still may fracture and collapse if weight isn't removed fast enough.

It doesn't pretend to define the other 99% of the process, of how each piece comes apart...99% of what process, the collapse process? No, it does not deal with anything beyond the buckling process

Agreed, this is semantics though

Most of the time, buckles are studied as "3 point hinges",one weak point at the top of the failure, one at the bottom and one someplace between those two...Not true. A column can buckle with no hinges present.

Also agreed. Whether you have "hinges" depends on whether the column continues to displace, and if it does, the areas of highest strain can go plastic. You get three such "hinges" if your column is fully fixed at both ends -- one "hinge" near each end, and one in the middle. If the column is free to rotate at each end (think of stacking weight on a pedestal that isn't bolted to the floor or welded to the weight above), you will only get one such hinge, in the middle.

(The middle hinge point is frequently shown half-way between the other two, but this is far from a rule.)...very far from a rule.

Agreed. If you have a complex built-up column, or one that thins as you go up, the middle hinge may not be at the midpoint in height. This should be inuitive.

When a multisegment column assembly buckles, the hinge points form at weak points in the assemblies, which are again at the connections...Not necessarily true.

Agreed -- in a built-up column one tries to design and place connections where they can handle their anticipated loads. Column buckling may lead to failure at the connections or in the component members. Note, however, if the column isn't being loaded in the way we thought it would when we designed it (e.g., building collapse versus simply standing under load), then all bets are off. Connections that are totally adequate for an intact structure may become susceptible to secondary damage in a collapse, simply because that's just not part of their design requirements.

Hope this helps. I welcome other SE's to chime in. Newtons_Bit would be a good one to try, he's much more up on this than I am if he's still around.
 
Looks like this is an argument over engineering terminology rather than anything more serious...

Aye.

The word "buckle" is being freely used to describe both elastic and inelastic processes.

The word "column" is being used to describe steel members - as manufactured and delivered to site - as well as 40+ storey assemblies of units with many connections.

The process we're discussing here is the behaviour of assemblies which have been stripped of horizontal support to some degree or other, and their failure modes. It's a shame the terminology wasn't cleared up at the start.

I'm not a SE so will sign off by referring (again) to the NIST FEA which considered various failure modes. None of them involved gross rupturing of the bulk material of any member. All related to connections afaics.
 
Post 4155, Glenn B explains that "1-9 Vol II states that all exterior columns had buckled "within approximately 2 seconds" of onset of collapse. This matches almost precisely the beginning of Stage 2, as per their graphs."

All exterior columns buckle over a two-second period according to NIST. That's Stage One. FFA in Stage 2 is after all columns have buckled.

This I understand. I do not understand what Chris7 is trying to say.
You keep talking about the time and ignoring the distance the building has descended. In Stage 1 the point NIST was measuring descended 7 feet [according to them]. In Figure 12-62 the exterior columns on the west wall are still buckling after Stage 1 [7 feet] and during Stage 2 [~13 feet]. The columns have not broken yet and are providing resistance during the FFA part of the actual collapse. The NIST model is NOT falling at FFA.
 
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Well Beachnut I am floored. I certainly expected a neutral answer from a Structural Engineering forum like this, and the fact that he quoted from a 9/11 Truth website takes away his neutrality. I obviously had no idea this guy had this kind of connection to 9/11 Truth (note to MM, Ergo, Chris7: "non-neutral" doesn't mean wrong or woo, it just means he is a participant in the 9/11 debate and therefore not neutral). Thanks Beachnut for catching this. I have the same questions out on another forum; we'll see what comes back from that. In the meantime, your research kind of knocked the wind out of me, in a good way.
It was a neutral answer. Beachnut automatically says all 9/11 truth sites are woo. He has a right to his opinion but he is not the arbitrator of what is true.

You should ask the engineering forum how much resistance a buckling column provides and if it ever goes to zero. They will tell you that a buckling column provides less and less resistance as the buckle increases but it is always providing resistance. It certainly does not go to zero at the beginning of the buckling.

Ask how much a much resistance a set of columns with moment frames will provide as they buckle.

Ask how much resistance is being provided when the center hinge point is about 90 to 100 degrees as in figure 12-62.

Note that the splices are not breaking.
 
Ask how much resistance is being provided when the center hinge point is about 90 to 100 degrees as in figure 12-62.

Note that the splices are not breaking.

Fascinating. And just the other day you were reluctantly forced to agree that connections are weaker than the raw material (apart from, as you noted, certain earthquake-resistant connections).

Ah yes .....

C7 said:
Structural engineers tell me that connections are made strong enough so that the member will bend before the connection fails. The philosophy is to have a failure be gradual to give the occupants time to exit.
then
C7 said:
As it turns out, that precaution only applies in earthquake zones and not likely to apply to WTC 7.

Now you're back to claiming plastic buckling of the material itself.
 
Well Beachnut I am floored. I certainly expected a neutral answer from a Structural Engineering forum like this, and the fact that he quoted from a 9/11 Truth website takes away his neutrality. I obviously had no idea this guy had this kind of connection to 9/11 Truth
I wouldn't throw away his neutrality just for that citation.

BAretired said:
No experience with that. Here is one article on the subject:

http://911research.wtc7.net/wtc/analysis/fires/steel.html
It looks to me like the guy googled for something on the subject in order to help with the question, totally ignorant about the motivations behind the article he found.

I think he gave you a neutral answer. I found it ironic he cited a woo site on heat and steel.
I agree with Beachnut here.
 
You keep talking about the time and ignoring the distance the building has descended. In Stage 1 the point NIST was measuring descended 7 feet [according to them]. In Figure 12-62 the exterior columns on the west wall are still buckling after Stage 1 [7 feet] and during Stage 2 [~13 feet]. The columns have not broken yet and are providing resistance during the FFA part of the actual collapse. The NIST model is NOT falling at FFA.

You keep making confident statements about Figure 12-62 without supporting them. (I was mildly curious how you determined that "The roofline is level.") As far as I can tell from reading your posts, you don't actually know how far the roofline has descended, how much resistance the exterior columns are providing, or how fast any portion of the building is falling according to the model at the instant depicted by Figure 12-62 -- and you actually don't seem to care very much. In this instance, I'm happy to take my cue from you.
 
OK gang,

So it looks like I got some pretty good answers from my SE on the forum. I took chris7's suggestion to heart and asked a couple more questions (the first just a re-ask of question 2 in the first round). Let's see what they say:

Thanks again BA,

I'd like to add a couple more questions for clarification if I may:

1.) Going back to my original question #2, does resistance in a buckling column ever go to zero? Or does it gradually decrease? On a Euler's curve (?) diagram it looked to me like there was a dramatic drop in strength/resistance but not all the way to zero. Assuming that the "center" hinge point never actually snaps apart, by the time it bends to 90 or 100 degrees, as a very rough estimate, would there still be 5% resistance? 2%?

2.) Would a set of columns with moment frames provide extra strength/resistance as they buckle?

Thank you again,
Chris Mohr

Note that for the sake of this questioning I am assuming that the columns bend to 90 or 100 degrees as visually shown in NIST's diagram 12-62. I realize that several people say that is highly unlikely or at least very rare, and that the evidence left behind in the debris points almost exclusively to breaking of columns at the welded/bolted spots. Let's see if anyone comments on the unlikeliness of that assumption. If not, I will ask that as a separate question.

This is fun.
 
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