=Christopher7;6145803
Insulation can only retain heat. It cannot increase the temperature above the temperature of the smoldering debris pile fire.
Christopher, this is a nonsense argument. The temperature of smoldering debris fires is a function of the amount of fuel, availability of oxygen and heat loss or dissipation. That's it.
Coal seam fires are a reasonable analogy, although they probably have a lot less oxygen than the WTC debris piles did. However they are known to reach high temps, easily over 1000 F.
There is no valid reason to insist that the debris pile fires were especially low in temperature.
Your argument about eutectics is based on two fallacies:
1) That the temperature was extraordinarily high, not achievable in a normal fire. This is not the case. Your own quotes show 'This strongly suggests that the temperatures in this region of the steel beam approached ~1,000ºC, ' which is within the range of a normal fire. You have also imposed an artificial temperature of 1500 C, which is not supported by the literature you quoted.
ie: as others have already pointed out, the eutectic process
does NOT indicate temps above 1000 celsius!! FAIL
2) That the sulphur did not come from any known source present in the building materials or contents. But you have failed to eliminate those very things - simply denying that gypsum could supply the sulphur is not a valid argument.
FAIL
Further, your doctrinal insistence that the sulphur came from <thermate or thermite> is remarkably weak since there is no direct evidence of either material!! You're essentially invoking something which is highly speculative and most likely fictitious.
Your arguments are weak and unconvincing, sorry. Repeating them ad infinitum does not strengthen them, it just makes your behavior that of a troll.
cheers
AE