Ozeco, you have yet to provide one iota of a basis for your claim that the relationship between columns 44 and 79 could have been changed and have no business saying my assumption here has been shown to be improper or incorrect.
NIST didn't bring up anything in this regard, and they did a finite element model and fire simulation of the entire building. If something had happened, like what you are wildly postulating, that would have helped their case for collapse due to fire, they would have.
May I help oz out here? Ok:
The building suffered from severe, wide-spread fires on many floors for several hours and had been shown (by achimspok, femr2; anecdotally by FDNY engineers) to have been moving in its entirety long before the "fast" final 18 seconds of its collapse. Therefore, it is reasonable to consider the significant probability that the structural geometry in the final minutes differed significabtly from the "as-build" geometry.
There.
That was easy
Tony is being obtuse - whether deliberately or not does not matter.
I will try for what should be the last time to express this simply:
There are two issues which are relevant:
1) The technical issue which in my criticism of Tony's claim is his assumption that the spacing between Col79 and Col44 was unchanged. Either in distance OR on applied forces which would change the distance is constraints changed. Tony assumes "unchanged" and his claim rests on that assumption. (BTW as an aside many members responding have also accepted the assumption whether or not they realised that they were doing so.)
2) Burden of proof. Tony assumes "unchanged" in a building that has been subject to wide ranging fire effects. It is his burden to demonstrate that his assumption is warranted. It is not my burden to prove that his assumption is false.
He has not supported his assumption so the status of his claim is "unproven" - put scientific words around that if you wish - I cannot be bothered.
Now Tony attempts the standard truther trick of getting me to accept reversed burden of proof. I am challenged to prove the opposite claim to Tony's.
Many things wrong with that.
The engineering reality is that it is highly unlikely that anyone could prove OR disprove the assumption with certainty. And I detailed the reasons in my earlier posts which, true to style, Tony chooses to ignore. BUT the probability is heavily weighted TOWARDS "must have changed". In a steel framed building through which fires had raged the idea that the spaces and constraints around one member would be unchanged is near zero. There is the remote possibility that all the changes could cancel out to produce a net zero effect. Repeating for emphasis of those who still miss the three key points:
1) I doubt it can ever be known what the true situation was; AND THEREFORE
2) Tony's claim rests on an unsupportable assumption. He may be right but he cannot demonstrate it. Nor can anyone demonstrate that the technical claim is wrong. The probability is strongly that he is wrong on the assumption. AND
3) THEREFORE his claim is not made/proven/demonstrated. And that is what I have said repeatedly.
The logical/procedural error is the one which dominates. Tony cannot support his claim.
AND it is not my job to build a counter claim to help Tony create his desired false dilemma - "ozeco cannot prove the alternate THEREFORE Tony Szamboti is right."
Enik initially followed the same technical limit, then expanded his technical boundary but is still tending to follow the procedural error.
analogies don't compute well on JREF BUT
Me: "Hey, I don't want to buy this car, it has no engine."
Car Salespersons T and E "You are wrong - build an engine to prove this car doesn't have one."