Grizzly Bear
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- Joined
- May 30, 2008
- Messages
- 7,963
Thing is, you're saying they're wrong to someone who isn't entirely familiar with what you're arguing and you haven't reiterated it. This really doesn't require you to rewrite an entire essay; if you've posted it already on this forum or elsewhere you can link to it.There would be no need if many of you were able to see them for what they are.
I don't need to "debunk" BV, BL and BLGB. Been there, did that.
It would actually help to know what exactly you find wrong with their writings so people know whether you're interpreting them for what they are; limiting case models. They aren't perfect, but you need to also understand that they do and don't do. If they're wrong explain where they got it wrong in relation to what their models represent.
As far as I've seen in videos of the North tower there was a tilt. It's visible in some videos of the collapse. I think where you're messing up is you're looking at the moment the collapse began, not a few seconds later once the collapse got going and the outer wall failure allowed for that movement. You can see the tilt of the antennae here:Concerning core led collapse for WTC1, my message is simple.
[qimg]http://www.sharpprintinginc.com/911/images/photoalbum/13/mackeytilt.jpg[/qimg]
(Hardfire: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDvDND9zNUk
R Mackey at 11:35 and 14:50, "We are talking 8 degrees of tilt. That is what the NIST reports.". R Mackey: '8 degrees about 1 axis"
R Mackey then explains that the upper south wall will come down inside the "lower block".)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iA35icy2-c
where it is amply visible, and it only took a 10 second search on youtube.
femr seems to have done a video showing a graphic of what that tilt does to the alignment of the columns.
The core failure in the impact regions sounds fine to me, but it does nothing to rebuke the fact that the outer walls failed in such a manner to allow for the tilt. This tilt is documented by videos of the collapse. I see it as a stage II of the collapse:If you do not over-exaggerate the tilt angle like the NIST and R Mackey do and measure the real one instead,
and if you don't pretend that the measured early movement in the NW corner and the antenna do not exist,
and if you notice all the leading falling debris from the south wall,
then you will notice that all observables point to core-led failure and none to south wall failure.
- Core fails at impact region
- Loads are redistributed to exterior columns that are weakened by fire where they were burning the most concentrated,
- And that exterior wall failure started the tilt.
If you're arguing for CD, the collapse initiation stage is the only viable point for it if there's ever going to be a time for it at all, since core failure wasn't a factor beyond that point.
It seems to me that you've gotten so concentrated trying to explain how the tilt is exaggerated that you've lost yourself in your own argument...
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