NoahFence
Banned
Doesn't even have the intellectual courage to answer yes or no, or give an opinion on what he thinks happened.
Sylvia Browne, eat your heart out.
I can see the future more betterer.
Doesn't even have the intellectual courage to answer yes or no, or give an opinion on what he thinks happened.
We're getting back to the Windmill Sail and the Car Wheel. The rotation of the Sail might replicate the rotation of the car wheel, but you can't apply the mechanics of the Sail to claim car wheels spin by the air blowing them.
Your prediction is not right. There will be an instantaneous deceleration at the instant of impact. There has to be.WilliamSeger said:Congratulations. Let's extend the thought experiments: I predict that if I gently place a brick on a piece of tissue paper and it can't hold the brick's weight, then if I drop the brick on the tissue paper, it will not cause the brick to decelerate; it will only cause a brief decrease in the acceleration due to gravity.
I just explained this in post #317.
I will gladly do this once you prove that the sites I have linked to are wrong. Also, please explain why a site that gives a "general explanation of physical concepts is unacceptable".
Cole's experiments replicate motions.
What statement needs proof?
Here is where you go wrong. Remember that a falling object is accelerating at 9.8 m/s2. Lets go back to our Skydiver. On jumping out of the plane the Skydiver will immediately begin experiencing Air Resistance, thus a force in the opposite direction of travel.A force in the opposite direction of travel will reduce the velocity of the falling object
Will the Skydiver accelerate, or decelerate?
If you say Accelerate, then explain how this is true if the hilited part above is correct, and if you say decelerate, then explain how come when they jump out of the plane they don't just float in the air and their downward velocity decreases due to deceleration.
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Cole's experiments replicate motions. Once again, your own statement proves his experiments are valid, and they don't depend on scale.
Hard to tell. He seems to confuse reduction in acceleration with deceleration, and doesn't seem to realize that multiple forces produce a resultant force that can be determined by vector addition, which makes it seem like he believes gravity stops acting for the instant that a falling object hits something else because objects can only be acted on by one force at a time, so the forces all have to queue up and take turns. But "seem" may be the only relevant word here.
Dave
I see what you're doing here, and it's in your best interest to stop while you think you are ahead.
I'm going to destroy the claim that you have a PhD in physics, or, at the very least, I'm going to prove that you are intentionally misleading people.
You underestimate me. I have only said that I am not an expert. I have never discussed my background, and that is because I don't want to make it an issue. I have given you numerous chances to use your "expertise" to clearly prove that I am wrong. You continuously refuse to do so. Sure, you make statements that claim I'm wrong, but you never take the extra step to cite a credible source confirming your statements.
Your game is easy to see. I know why you try so hard to obfuscate the deceleration discussion. Don't think I don't know the reason.
You should stop while you're ahead, or at least you think you're ahead.
Is FalseFlag conflating acceleration with velocity?
I see what you're doing here, and it's in your best interest to stop while you think you are ahead.
I'm going to destroy the claim that you have a PhD in physics, or, at the very least, I'm going to prove that you are intentionally misleading people.
You underestimate me. I have only said that I am not an expert. I have never discussed my background, and that is because I don't want to make it an issue. I have given you numerous chances to use your "expertise" to clearly prove that I am wrong. You continuously refuse to do so. Sure, you make statements that claim I'm wrong, but you never take the extra step to cite a credible source confirming your statements.
Your game is easy to see. I know why you try so hard to obfuscate the deceleration discussion. Don't think I don't know the reason.
You should stop while you're ahead, or at least you think you're ahead.

He is correct in one respect: at impact, there will be a reduction in velocity. Without it there is no force acting against g.Hard to tell. He seems to confuse reduction in acceleration with deceleration, and doesn't seem to realize that multiple forces produce a resultant force that can be determined by vector addition, which makes it seem like he believes gravity stops acting for the instant that a falling object hits something else because objects can only be acted on by one force at a time, so the forces all have to queue up and take turns. But "seem" may be the only relevant word here.
Dave
They are only valid in replicating the motion. Nothing else. Since there is nothing else that they are valid for, and the mechanism of that motion can't be applied beyond the model that it occurred in, why are they in a 9/11 CT Thread?
You are right. They are only valid in replicating the motion observed during the collapse.They are only valid in replicating the motion.
We agree 100 percent.Nothing else.
What do you mean "the mechanism" of the motion? You are just trying to use unnecessary words to make it look like Cole is still wrong. He is not, and you admitted it.Since there is nothing else that they are valid for, and the mechanism of that motion can't be applied beyond the model that it occurred in, why are they in a 9/11 CT Thread?
Bwahahahaha. You skeptics can't even agree with each other.He is correct in one respect: at impact, there will be a reduction in velocity. Without it there is no force acting against g.
F=m (dv/dt)
Where he has a major problem is understanding that the force is LIMITED in value by the geometry and material of that which is impacted.
He also seems to think that all forces in the universe are equal, since, you know, all of them are connected and his understanding of action-reaction is simplistic to the point of parody.
He is correct in one respect: at impact, there will be a reduction in velocity. Without it there is no force acting against g.
F=m (dv/dt)
This is just more evasion. Please post credible links that confirm the specific claims you have made in post #317, or retract them.
Dave
I have repeatedly asked you to pick out one statement you want me to verify. You have had numerous attempts to do so, yet you refuse. Since you refuse to identify even one statement, then all of them must be true. If all of my statements are true, I will not retract any of them.
He is correct in one respect: at impact, there will be a reduction in velocity. Without it there is no force acting against g.
F=m (dv/dt)
Where he has a major problem is understanding that the force is LIMITED in value by the geometry and material of that which is impacted.