triforcharity
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2009
- Messages
- 13,961
Kurt, I'll address a few of the points that you bring up.
Any given area is not the entire building as a whole. It is referring to a singluar office, or a small designated area such as that. 20-30 minutes is based on an estimated fuel load, that can vary from one room to the next.
Citation needed.
Well, are you talking linear or are you talking volumetric? And, since neither have virtually the same CoTE, i'll ask again for a citation.
Kinda hard to test something that you have very little of, and what they did have, was not saved.
Yes. No evidence was ever found, to this day, to even warrant any kind of investigation into explosives.
Well, considering the fire burned untill it collapsed, I would assume yes.
Down. Since really, that is just about the only way it could go....
Gravity. Possibly, but since the exterior columns were not the main support of vertical loads, it's really irrelevant.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say you haven't read much of the NIST report on 7WTC, and what you did read, you didn't understand.
We've seen these same kind of questions that only arise due to personal ignorance.
If, as the NIST report stated, there were only enough burnable materials to sustain a fire for 20-30 minutes in any given area, how is it that fires burned long enough to initiate collapse? According to their computer model, global collapse didn't manifest until the raging fires had burned continuously for 4 hours.
Any given area is not the entire building as a whole. It is referring to a singluar office, or a small designated area such as that. 20-30 minutes is based on an estimated fuel load, that can vary from one room to the next.
2) Regarding the thermal expansion that allegedly initiated the girder unseating from Column 79, did the NIST report exhibit scientific integrity by excluding thermal conductivity from their simulation?
Citation needed.
4) Doesn't the NIST report acknowledge that steel and concrete have virtually the same coefficient of thermal expansion?
Well, are you talking linear or are you talking volumetric? And, since neither have virtually the same CoTE, i'll ask again for a citation.
5) The NIST report stated that they tested no actual steel from WTC 7. Does this exhibit scientific integrity?
Kinda hard to test something that you have very little of, and what they did have, was not saved.
6) The NIST stated that they did not test for explosives. Does this exhibit scientific integrity in an impartial investigation into the collapse of WTC 7?
Yes. No evidence was ever found, to this day, to even warrant any kind of investigation into explosives.
7) Does the verifiable evidence that the NIST report presents show that the fires burned long and hot enough to meet the four hire fire requirement exhibited by their computer model?
Well, considering the fire burned untill it collapsed, I would assume yes.
8) Do we know which way the 58 perimeter columns allegedly buckled, or is that an unknown?
Down. Since really, that is just about the only way it could go....
9) What was the cause of the alleged buckling of the 58 perimeter columns? Were they significantly weakened by the fires?
Gravity. Possibly, but since the exterior columns were not the main support of vertical loads, it's really irrelevant.
10) If floors disconnected from the interior columns due to thermal expansion, what caused the interior columns collapse? Were the interior columns significantly weakened by fires?
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say you haven't read much of the NIST report on 7WTC, and what you did read, you didn't understand.
We've seen these same kind of questions that only arise due to personal ignorance.
