ergo
Illuminator
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2010
- Messages
- 4,339
Agreed.
That's why they won't answer any more of my questions.
Yeah, that must be it.
Agreed.
That's why they won't answer any more of my questions.
So now you have two co-authors stating that there are MANY kinds of red/gray chips, INCLUDING paint chips. This directly contradicts the Bentham paper's findings that there WEREN'T any paint chips and that there were ONLY thermitic chips. BIG mistake.
I'm not aware of any reports of magnetically attracted WTC paint chips. I'm not denying they exist necessarily; I just don't know who is making this claim.
I've just read the quotes from Ivan that you included. He/they conclude the chips are epoxy-based paint. The 'specifically Laclede' part was speculation, quite likely wrong.
You're representing this to mean 'lack of Laclede' = 'not paint at all', which is little better than outright lying.
Let me remind you:
Conclusion: Bentham chips (a) to (d) and Millette’s chips with the same/similar characteristic are all the same and they are all some epoxy-based coating (paint) on rust flakes/oxidized steel."
My bolding.
So I don't really see how you are coming to the conclusions you are.
Ergo, why don't you go down to the paint store and buy a good assortment of different brands of red paint, find some mildly oxidized steel, paint it with your samples, let cure, scrape off the paint, and test it with a magnet? It has to be more productive than arguing on internet forums! You might even submit them to Harrit & Jones for testing! No fair letting them know in advance what it is!![]()
Yeah, that must be it.![]()
Thank you for that explanation, but in reality you have one author talking about red chips, the other answering rather casually and loosely someone else's question about red-grey chips specifically, but perhaps Legge is really only referring to red chips. And neither of those quotes suggest that the red chips are attracted magnetically.
So I don't really see how you are coming to the conclusions you are.
I just went to the yard of our institute and scrapped off some paint chips on rusted steel (paints are green, grey, brown and reddish).
Here is a photo of this "fine collection":
Thank you for that explanation, but in reality you have one author talking about red chips, the other answering rather casually and loosely someone else's question about red-grey chips specifically, but perhaps Legge is really only referring to red chips. And neither of those quotes suggest that the red chips are attracted magnetically.
So I don't really see how you are coming to the conclusions you are.
Over in the Mark-Basile-Thread, I just posted excerpts from my (yet unfinished) transcript of a recent interview Mark gave. In it, he acknowledges that "The vast majority of [red chips pulled from WTC dust] actually are primer paint".
Frank Legge, too, has already acknowledged in writing (I'll write about that later) that some red-gray chips are paint. And Jones, likewise, has suggested that Millette may have looked at the "wrong" chips.
So their line of defense clearly is "we admit there is primer paint, but there is also nano-thermite, and Millette picked the wrong chips" (and they'll add that this was evil, deliberate deception by this creepy tool of the NWO overlords, or some such nonsense).
Which means we should get them to commit to a method on how to select the right chips - before destroying by fire of course.
And specifically, ask: How did Jeff Farrer select the chips he tested in the DSC?
They should give us an exact protocol of steps to follow. This was asked of Frank Legge - and he ran away. I asked this of Mark Basile - no reply yet. Someone asked Steven Jones - I haven't heard of an answer yet.
(Better yet, they should give us chips - and we know that Kevin Ryan ran away from that)
In december 2012, Mark Basile was interviewed by Bernie Suarez and Andrew Steele of the internet radio format "9/11 Free Fall", about his past studies of red-gray chips, and about his planned new and independent study.
I am happy to announced that Mark has realized a few facts that we have been preaching for a long time, and is an honest enough chap to acknowledge them openly and without hesitation. Mainly:
- There are two, not just one, different known WTC steel primers to be considered
- The vast majority of red chips that one pulls out of the dust is in fact primer paint (and only some show this exotherm behaviour that make him think they are thermitic)
- He thinks that even Steven Jones had "definitely" some praimer paint chips in his study (presumably Harrit e.al.).
I'll transcribe Basile's full uninterupted texts from the moment the host stops speaking till Basile stops speaking, so as not give the likes of MM or ergo cause to accuse me of quote mining. And yes, I am fully aware that Basile also states clearly he thinks there is nano-thermite in there. That's not the point of this post.
Money quotes in bold:
1. starting 25:50
"I've been supplied with a sample of – from what I understand there may have been actually two different primers used with the construction of the World Trade Center, I have been supplied with one of them[1]. And I put it through the exact same test[2] and it didn't produce iron spheres. Basically all it does is it turns into, in large part, glass fibers and a bunch of minerals and so on, but there's no iron spheres or iron films or anything that gets produced from the one primer that I've put through the exact same experiment. And I wouldn't expect any paint to do that. I also put a number of different paints that I basically have just in my house, they're not World Trade Center primer paint or anything, but they are just paints. And just seeing for myself, again, you know, run another experiment, and I didn't expect them to produce molten iron, and they didn't. You wouldn't expect any paints that you paint onto any building […?...] caught on fire to produce molten iron. If it did, you wouldn't use it to paint your building. You just wouldn't do it – I wouldn't, anyway. Nobody in their right mind would insure your building if it did."I would like to comment that Basile didn't know about a second primer when I talked with him on the phone the day before Thanksgiving. I supplied him with links to some of my blog posts, including the one about LaClede primer. Although he never responded to my mails, it seems he still took notice and accepts, with some legitimate caution, the information I provided. So thumbs up to him
2. starting 27:26
"There are a lot of paint chips in the dust! You should make that perfectly clear! Just when you, if anybody in the audience, let's say, would get out there and get a World Trade Center dust sample, and they pull out red chips from this, I'm not telling anybody in the world that every red chip you're gonna pull out of there is one of these nano-thermite chips. The vast majority of them actually are primer paint, from what I […?...], but that doesn't mean they all are. And they are not all, because […?...] pulled out ones where I've seen the reaction, I've seen the product, so I know you're in there. But there is also a lot of primer paint chips in there, too."
3. starting 28:28
"I think some of the chips that, you know, Jones and all looked at were definitely, you know, primer paint chips, too, so not everything in there was nano-thermite chips. But there were chips that gave this exotherm, and that's where the real key thing is. You get those extreme exotherm at just a little off 400 °C and it produces molten iron as a reaction product."
This raises a few questions that I would like Basile, as well as Jones and collaborators, to answer:
A) How do you tell primer chips apart from "thermitic" chips before doing any thermal testing, i.e. without destructing them?
B) Were Jones, Farrer, Harrit aware that the vast majority of the chips are primer paint?
B1) If so, how exactly did they select the chips which to experiment on?
B2) In particular, how did Farrer select the chips he tested in the DSC? Did all chips he tested there show this exotherm behaviour?
C) Which chips in the Jones study are probably paint chips, in Basile's opinion, and in the opinion of Jones, Farrer, Legge, Ryan, Harrit?
D) Will any of these men acknowledge that they didn't disprove "paint" when they compared just one type of red-gray chips with one type of WTC primer paint?
Footnotes:
[1] I am 99% certain that he was supplied with a paint sample from WTC columns, so that would most probably be Tnemec 99 or 69, and not LaClede paint from the floor trusses, but I can't prove it, and I am not sure that Basile himself is clear about the source of his primer sample.
[2] That test is heating the sample on a thin strip of steel that he runs a controlled electrical current through, observing the ensuing reactions visually, and looking at the residue through a photomicroscope.
Cool. At what temperature do they ignite, producing a bright flash and iron microspheres?
"I do not agree that our Laclede theory is quite likely wrong.
It is very likely right, just the final proof, it means the proof of strontium chromate, is missing."
"Jim Millette specifically said to me, unequivocally, NO STRONTIUM CHROMATE.
It was clear to me that he looked and he did not find it.
I wouldn't bet my nuts on it being LaClede."
"Concerning this stuff, we have discussed in the past: it is an anticorrosion agent which is expected, during the long periods of time, to be depleted from the paint..."
"I understand that since Millette did not detect this chromate, he is reluctant to specify that particular "Laclede paint" as the red material of chips (a) to (d).)"
"Jim Millette specifically said to me, unequivocally, NO STRONTIUM CHROMATE."
"Otherwise (considering the basic question if Bentham chips (a) to (d) were Laclede paint):
Oystein [a none scientist with no expertise in this science] calculated the elemental composition of Laclede primer according to its specification, and Almond (and later Oystein) simulated its XEDS spectrum.
The agreement of this spectrum with the spectra of chips (a) to (d) is simply stunning and very convincing:"
"Indeed, they are still some speculative/uncertain points in my reasoning, but Laclede red primer still remains to be a pretty good/excellent candidate for the material of Bentham chips (a) to (d); and I do not believe that any other WTC paint or other layered material can "beat it"![]()
I simply think that our "Laclede paint story" makes a perfect sense!"
Congrats, MM, you've reached a whole new level of dishonesty."Concerning this stuff, we have discussed in the past: it is an anticorrosion agent which is expected, during the long periods of time, to be depleted from the paint..."
Expected to completely disappear without a trace?
[...]
This is very durable stuff.
Concerning this stuff, we have discussed in the past: it is an anticorrosion agent which is expected, during the long periods of time, to be depleted from the paint and to be concentrated on the cracks and other damaged parts of the paint layer - this is in fact the principle of its anticorrosive action.
bolding and itemizing are mine"MM:
- No, I don't think that strontium chromate (or its ions) can completely "disappear"
- just its needle crystals could be more or less changed by very slow dissolution during so many years
- perhaps escaping the detection by 'plain microscopy'."
"...just the final proof, it means the proof of strontium chromate, is missing."
.
All I've been saying is that Dr. Millette looked at the wrong 9/11 WTC dust chips and had very good business reasons for not wanting to perform a test that could support the 2009 Bentham paper.
MM
All I've been saying is that Dr. Millette looked at the wrong 9/11 WTC dust chips
and had very good business reasons for not wanting to perform a test that could support the 2009 Bentham paper.
All I've been saying is that Dr. Millette looked at the wrong 9/11 WTC dust chips...
Just something for you to check out ergo. Maybe you'll "see" what I'm talking about.
The vast majority of [red chips pulled from WTC dust] actually are primer paint"
I just sent Harrit an email asking him if they found red/gray, magnetically attracted paint chips and what tests they did to distinguish them from the "thermtic" chips.
I've asked him this a couple times before, but curiously, I never got an answer.