Zipster
Thinker
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2008
- Messages
- 178
If someone can repost this post, since His Royal Arrogance has me on ignore.
You can't compare the structure of the WTC to a flag pole. The vertical frames are not a single piece structure all the way up. They are composed of many, many individual pieces bolted together.
If you take away the horizontal trusses and framework, the vertical pieces will collapse under its own weight (and from swaying back and forth in the wind).
The taller something is compared to the size of its cross-sectional footprint, the more unstable it is. Simple physics. Not Heiwa Physics, real-world physics.
Here's a very simple experiment for you, Heiwa. I'm sure you're familiar with LEGOs? Why don't you use a single sized brick (whatever size you want) and stack lots of them on top of each other to roughly 6 feet or so. Then give the top brick a perpendicular force. You'll find that it'll readily bend and eventually fall. And it doesn't require a large force either! Simple!
The reason is because the more weight you add to the tower, the more it'll act like a cantilever beam (but vertical). As long as it stands perfectly upright, it'll be fine. But once any force is applied perpendicularily, it'll become unstable. The higher it is, the proportionally smaller the force becomes.
Momenttimber = Fperpendicular x d. Where d is the height of the tower. Simple.
You can't compare the structure of the WTC to a flag pole. The vertical frames are not a single piece structure all the way up. They are composed of many, many individual pieces bolted together.
If you take away the horizontal trusses and framework, the vertical pieces will collapse under its own weight (and from swaying back and forth in the wind).
The taller something is compared to the size of its cross-sectional footprint, the more unstable it is. Simple physics. Not Heiwa Physics, real-world physics.
Here's a very simple experiment for you, Heiwa. I'm sure you're familiar with LEGOs? Why don't you use a single sized brick (whatever size you want) and stack lots of them on top of each other to roughly 6 feet or so. Then give the top brick a perpendicular force. You'll find that it'll readily bend and eventually fall. And it doesn't require a large force either! Simple!
The reason is because the more weight you add to the tower, the more it'll act like a cantilever beam (but vertical). As long as it stands perfectly upright, it'll be fine. But once any force is applied perpendicularily, it'll become unstable. The higher it is, the proportionally smaller the force becomes.
Momenttimber = Fperpendicular x d. Where d is the height of the tower. Simple.