basically the more I work on this the stronger that building looks and the less likely a collapse could have been naturally initiated simply by fires
which according to the NIST report did not exceed 500 degrees ?
my bet is C but could have been F
do me a favor and go through the NIST report and find the section which covers the examination of the steel subjected to heat
"my bet is C but could have been F" followed by telling
you to go through NIST... He's a two-faced idiot.
NIST's fire simulation is in NCSTAR1-5F. They estimate structural steel temperatures (in Celsius, not Fahrenheit) up to about 930
oC. This simulation is also consistent with all the recovered pieces.
Now, while we didn't recover any piece (in recognizable shape) that got that hot, we do have the mockup fire test in NCSTAR1-5E, which was instrumented. All of those fires exceeded 1000
oC gas temperature, and one even exceeded 1600
oC before destroying the instruments measuring the temperature. So yes, it's possible.
Moron doesn't have a clue what's in the report, yet he's demanding that you read it. Don't waste your time on this guy.