Originally Posted by aggle-rithm
How does your "axiom" explain the Balzac sur Vitry demolition, in which part
C clearly crushes part A to the ground?
The Balzac sur Vitry destruction is a controlled
demolition. A big section of part A is first demolished by external means,
part C drops, and when what remains of part A contacts dropping part C, part
A still destroys part C. Needs clever planning, though.
HEIWA'S AXIOM PROVEN FALSE DESPITE PROPONENT'S INSOUCIANT HANDWAVING BLITHE GOAL POST MOVING.
These French know their structures.
ABC Balzac Vitry Demolition.
1. Demolition without explosives.
2. No explosives sounds.
3. From photos, construction is load bearing precast concrete walls, poured
in place floor/wall connections. First floor are poured in place concrete
columns and beams.
4. Hydraulic jacks inside push one floor sideways.
5. Part C top crushes Part A to bottom, disproving Heiwa's Axiom: "Axiom is
about two parts C and A of identical strucure, where A carried C before and
where C is then dropped on A by gravity ... and no one-way crush down of A
takes place."
5. "Pyroclastic" concrete clouds formed without explosives.
" On the site of the Val-de-Marne, an officer explains the method of
demolition:
According to Daniel Rieber, driver of the work:
It is a so-called demolition by "verinage." The use of the hydraulic
cylinders that are operated remotely by an operator who can move the upper
part of the building laterally. Once it is out of its center of gravity, the
top goes down to the bottom and the building will collapse on itself down "
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syzKBBB_THE
HEIWA GIVE AGGLE-RITHM THE MONEY !