I won't yet assume that this question...
That "irrelevant diagram" tells you how a building supports itself. It visualizes how loads are transferred from floor, to beam, to column, to foundation, to ground. You should "theoretically" be able to read it and visualize what happens when you "remove" a certain "percentage of columns" from an assembly. If the point flies over your head at this point then that's not a good sign for you.
Surely you folks can do better <snip>
Here, let's take an example of your work:
Intact columns means that they weren't severed. It means that the estimated 85% remaining intact columns did not have any ends dangling in the air, waiting to slip by their counterparts below. It means that 85% of the column structure was intact. Do you know what intact means?
Here you describe the strength of a building in absolute terms; This one sentence tells us plenty; it is the kind made by people who are complete engineering novices, who refuse to study would try to use in a discussion of structural performance.
Eccentric loading,
creep, load path,
moment are terms that you probably haven't taken the time to look up.You've been too busy trying to insult your peers rather than listen. So the question is:
how do we take your "85% intact" posts seriously if you're incapable of demonstrating the engineering merits of your own claims?
A one-hour office fire would not suddenly sever the 85% intact columns either. Nor would they suddenly bend like wet noodles.
With this sentence most people posting in this thread can immediately point out that you've never seen or even heard of a
time/temperature curve. These have existed for years as a part of long accumulated study of material properties in building construction, and having put yourself into an engineering topic you ware responsible for having looked at it before critiquing your peers. What's you're excuse for that?
Education time:
Steel doesn't lose it's strength "simultaneously or immediately because of fire; it loses it over a period of time as it gets heated. The reduction in strength lowers the critical failure threshold, and induces a behavior called creep which introduces instability in the structure.
That is what causes it to fail at collapse initiation.
In a structural system the failure of one column means that the loads it carried have to be supported by an adjacent column, and so on; reduce the load carrying capacity of enough columns in the assembly, and you increase the eccentricity of the load until it becomes unstable. Hence, every post you make claiming that the building can't have collapsed because it was "85% intact" is a statement born of ignorance.
It means continuous. Connecting upper portion to lower. This means that the impact from the upper portion slumping onto the lower would be translated through the 85% remaining continuous, intact, column structure
By this small paragraph most of us can tell one thing:
showing self-evident load distributions
It apparently isn't so self-evident to you if you can't visualize it for the towers.
That's a tough call bud.. Real science isn't always entertaining. Sometimes it means writing long, detailed explanations that
certain uninterested people will usually write off with flimsy 1 to 3-liner dismissals.