So when you were down at ground zero that day hearing all these different explosions and deciphering exactly what they were and weren't with your super human fireman dog ears how come some of your fellow firemen didn't have this same talent??
Other fireman DID hear it. Some brought it up, some didn't during the Post-9/11 interviews. As I believe BigAl posted,
"The Scott cylinders and the oxygen cylinders were all letting go. They were blowing up left and right."
FDNY Firefighter Todd Heaney on 9/11 (FDNY oral testimony transcripts)"
Here is the link.
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/nyregion/20050812_WTC_GRAPHIC/9110255.PDF
Page 13 of 16 in the PDF.
This is by Todd Hearney, and is a good friend of mine. I still talk to him today.
I mean some of them did report secondary explosions? They didn't say anything about Oxygen tanks.
Exploding rockets huh??
Some of them also didn't say anything about falling bodies either. But, as we all know, there were loud bangs from people jumping out of the building.
So I guess my question is if there were so many other available things to be exploding during the collapse of the WTC buildings that weren't bombs then where are the recordings of all these other things exploding?
To answer this assinine question is going to be easy.
TNT-RDX etc. typically have a Db level of 140 decibels. This is just short of hearing damage, depending on the distance from the source. You won't understand this, but SCOTT packs going off are only around 90-100 db.
And please... grace us with you expertise. Explain exactly for instance the difference between the sound of a bomb and say a power line or electrical transformer blowing up.
I will be glad to. I'll even use small words for you so your brain can understand them easily.
Power line's don't blow up. Transformers do. Transistors do. Fuses do.
Arc?? Yes, but that is a whole different noise all together.
Again, bomb going off 140+ depending on the distance from source. Plus, the echo would have been heard EVERYWHERE, not just around a certain area. Plus, not to mention, a bomb going off is usually a very short, loud noise. Air tanks, etc, not so short, not so loud.
And how loud would it be in the middle (the core) of a collapsing 110 story building with acre wide floors? Who stood around to hear this?
And if people were close enough did hear such a sound then how many would still be alive?
Are you serious?? Could it be possible that you could present such a dirt-dumb question WITHOUT being a complete fool???
Anyway, I would imagine the decibel level would be well beyond the levels that your ear drum could sustain. (Which, BTW, is around 194.
Here is a site to use. Its easy to understand.
http://www.gcaudio.com/resources/howtos/loudness.html