Do you (or does anyone else) know how much orthogonal support was provided by the corners?
Very little and of near zero relevance to the actual collapse mechanism. It is a false claim to support Tony's model of mechanism - which he has never described comprehensively because it is not a coherent model.
The exterior columns were connected to the floors all the way around the building, and my guess is those connections provided the overwhelming majority of orthogonal support.
True enough in the original undamaged situation. BUT
triply irrelevant in the context of Tony's nonsense claims:
1) He shows no understanding of the three stages of the actual mechanism viz "initiation" >> "transition" >> "progression. Whether he is pretending ignorance or genuinely does not comprehend matters not.
2) He continues to confuse sequence - getting simple concepts like "BEFORE" and "AFTER" reversed.
3) By the time of the aspects he is claiming:
(a) "Initiation" had dropped the top block;
(b) "transition" had started ROOSD - those floors already removed; and
(c) "progression" was under way - three mechanisms viz "ROOSD", perimeter peel off and core strip down. AND
(d) in that sequence - look to the posting history to see how often Tony confuses the sequence order.
In that setting the corner aspects are irrelevant - second or lower order magnitude and overwhelmed by the energy of the actual collapse mechanism.
Would cutting just the corners actually make that much difference?
No - whenever it was done. Little if any effect at any stage and utterly useless at the stage of progress of collapse that Tony claims.
Remember that all of Tony's claims make the same two foundation errors:
(i) He
always assumes false premises to support his pre-determined conclusion of CD; AND
(ii) He
always gets the sequence of happenings wrong. Usually looking for things "AFTER" which have already happened "BEFORE" (or would have happened "BEFORE" except they were impossible - e.g. Missing Jolt and Axial Impact of "dropping" columns.)
Further explanation available if needed OR references to multiple previous explanations.
And no apology for both instances of "
always" - let me know if you find any exceptions.
