Mr. Smack, this has gone far enough. Think about what you're saying.
You claim that Flight 175 couldn't have hit at the speed NIST claimed due to engineering limits of the plane, and the laws of aerodynamics. That's your claim. Apparently this "truth" is so obvious that even you, with no background whatsoever in the subject, can see this by inspection.
Unlike you, I do have background in the subject. I have a Master's and Engineer's degree in Aeronautics from GALCIT. Furthermore, on the morning of the attacks, I was at the Boeing Commercial Aircraft facility in Everett, Washington, talking with real Boeing engineers. You want names? Sure. Our team lead for the day was Dr. Kirby Keller of Boeing Phantom Works, based in St. Loius. (Aside: I can hardly wait to see what the nutters think of "Phantom Works.")
So here's another fact for you. I'm planting my feet and telling you that the impact speed and trajectory of Flight 175 violates no physical laws, and was well within the performance envelope of the aircraft. Your "obvious" truth is wrong.
Now, it's possible that I've made a mistake. But I've given my unequivocal opinion. That's the fact. To reconcile this fact with your worldview, there are a few possible consequences:
1. You're simply wrong, as usual;
2. I'm a complete fraud, having bought my way somehow through grad school; or
3. I'm an Agent working under the direction of teh Conspiracy.
I know you desperately want either 2. or 3. to be true, but unfortunately, this just isn't so. How can we tell?
What about all the other Boeing engineers? Let's start with Case 2. If the "truth" is really so obvious as you claim, and I can't see it just because I'm a moron, then any competent engineer should agree with you. Where are they? Boeing aircraft do fly, so clearly they have at least some capable engineers on staff. Why has not
every single one of these people stood up and pointed out that this is impossible? What makes you think you're more versed in this subject than they are?
For that matter, why would NIST even put forth such a proposal if they knew it was physically impossible? Don't they know they'd be laughed out of their jobs? Don't they know Boeing would sue them from stem to stern for lying about their aircraft?
Which brings us to Case 3. Maybe I'm taking my orders, right now, over a little earbud speaker. Maybe I know you're right but I have orders to confuse you, because you're such a danger to our plans.
Again, what about all those other Boeing engineers? If I'm lying, and NIST is lying, why are they going along with it? Are
they in on it too?
Do you know how many people work for Boeing?
Even if they are all in on it, what about Airbus? What about Canadair, Beechcraft, Pratt&Whitney, Burt Rutan, etc.?
If you're right about the physics of the situation, then it should be
trivial to prove it once and for all. And you and your little friends would be the
absolute last people to prove this. You bring no expertise to the table. The alternative is that basically the entire industrialized world is conspiring against you, and made up something clumsy and easily falsified anyway out of sheer laziness, when a more reasonable explanation would have sufficed.
This is, to put it mildly, mad.
Your insistence that Flight 175 couldn't have hit that fast is no less insane than Christopher Brown's insistence that the WTC Towers had a concrete core. You have no evidence. At best, someone made a mistake. Mistakes can be corrected, and in this case are easily corrected.
Please stop embarrassing yourself.