This is my first post
I look forward to joining future discussions and learning a great deal.
Thanks!
Welcome
This is my first post
I look forward to joining future discussions and learning a great deal.
Thanks!
geggy, this is what your quote does not say:
"August 27, 2003: NIST Investigators Rule Out Weakened Steel as a Factor in Collapses"
Much as you'd like to interpret it that way.
Welcome, Pangea. Post early, post often.This is my first post, and I wanted to thank you all for providing me with so many great links about 9-11 conspiracies.
I was recently in an online debate with a CTist who wanted me to provide proof that all of the theories he was posting were false (yet he failed to provide the proof that they weren't).
I stumbled upon this forum and all of the wonderful links to offer that proof, and didn't really need to look anywhere else! Of course, in true CTist fashion, it was met with "Nope. Can't be true because that's what they want you to believe." and "Yeah? Well, what about XYZ, then?"
I look forward to joining future discussions and learning a great deal.
Thanks!
Was there a protocol in place to scramble fighters to protect D.C. airspace whenever a plane crashed in New York? (Not IS there, but WAS there, on 9/11/2001?)
Again, I strongly believe planes crashed into all buildings and that includes the pentagon. Reason why I believe that is by hearing several witness statements and looking at photographic evidences showing debris's from an AA77 airtliner. But I'm not sure about the hijackers, though. Different websites have shown their names were on the passenger list...some didnt show their names. Hard to tell which is which.
Engineering reports should be read by engineers, not amateurs (including myself).
No. There were intercept rules in place, rules that had never been put to the test.
Its also interesting for me to see words like "scramble" used in arguments about timeframes by people who have no idea what the word means outside the movies. I wonder if any CTer has bothered to actually look up the true launch times for an FA-18E/F or F-16C/D in full intercept mode. Do they picture hundreds or thousands of military aircraft, all over the country, sitting at the end of the runway with a pilot sitting at the stick for hours on end, waiting for the "go" signal? Do those hundreds of aircraft just sit there, idly burning through expensive J5? Are there armed sidewinder missiles sitting on their pylons and wingtips?
"There was a airforce base only 10 miles away!!!"
Yeah? And there's a fire station within 10 miles of millions of homes in America. How come so many burn down?
An excellent post.No. There were intercept rules in place, rules that had never been put to the test.
Its also interesting for me to see words like "scramble" used in arguments about timeframes by people who have no idea what the word means outside the movies. I wonder if any CTer has bothered to actually look up the true launch times for an FA-18E/F or F-16C/D in full intercept mode. Do they picture hundreds or thousands of military aircraft, all over the country, sitting at the end of the runway with a pilot sitting at the stick for hours on end, waiting for the "go" signal? Do those hundreds of aircraft just sit there, idly burning through expensive J5? Are there armed sidewinder missiles sitting on their pylons and wingtips?
"There was a airforce base only 10 miles away!!!"
Yeah? And there's a fire station within 10 miles of millions of homes in America. How come so many burn down?
No. There were intercept rules in place, rules that had never been put to the test.
Its also interesting for me to see words like "scramble" used in arguments about timeframes by people who have no idea what the word means outside the movies. I wonder if any CTer has bothered to actually look up the true launch times for an FA-18E/F or F-16C/D in full intercept mode. Do they picture hundreds or thousands of military aircraft, all over the country, sitting at the end of the runway with a pilot sitting at the stick for hours on end, waiting for the "go" signal? Do those hundreds of aircraft just sit there, idly burning through expensive J5? Are there armed sidewinder missiles sitting on their pylons and wingtips?
"There was a airforce base only 10 miles away!!!"
Yeah? And there's a fire station within 10 miles of millions of homes in America. How come so many burn down?
Lemme see if I can do an estimated guess on the entire "scramble a fighter squadron" thing:
1: Situation assesment: Does the situtation indicate anything else than a commercial airliner out of route? If it IS a highjacking, how will the highjackers react to the approach of a couple of fighter planes? I would say around 10-15 minutes to make sure its a "hostile" target.
2: Fueling the planes. AFAIK those things doesn't stand arround fully fueled due to the danger of explosions. Let's put that one at 20 minutes and pretend they are using a turbo-fuelline like the formula 1 fuellines. Not to mention that this also means that the fuel truck is already on site.
3: Arming the planes. Same reason as 2. Same approximate length of time.
4: Gathering the pilots. Let's exclude this and say that they are at the base. They still have to get into g-suits etc. That is NOT fast work. And it's not equiptment you stand around in for longer than you have to.
20-30 minutes.
5: Planning a flightplan to prevent the fighter planes from a: colliding with other planes b: colliding with tall buildings called "skyscrapers" (bear in mind that the passenger jets were probably in low altitude).
20-30 minutes.
6: Briefing to ensure the pilots know what they are doing and where they are going.
10-20 minutes depending on what the flightplan looks like.
7: Actually LAUNCHING the darned things. This alone will take about 15 minutes from pilot-in-cockpit to plane-in-flight due to things like taxiing the plane out on the runway etc.
Lets calculate my estimate then:
if 1,2 anbd 3 are done at the same time together with 4 an 5.
While 4 is happening, the tower is putting together a flightplan, putting it short: 20 minutes.
Briefing: 10 minutes.
Launch: 15 minutes.
Total: 45 minutes.
And then they still have to get there.....
Please feel free to correct my math if someone reading have a better understanding of these things.
While several of these things can be done simultaniously, things like the briefing takes time due to the safety of the pilots and the citizens of the city. Flying a fighter isn't like driving a car from a to b.
ETA: Sorry, discovered a mistake in the calculations. Found out that 1,2,3,4 and 5 would probably be done at the same time in an organised enviroment such as the airforce.
Yeah Turn on the oven at 500 degree F and stick your head into it and see if your hair vaporizes. Steel melts at approx. 2500-2750 degree F. Do the math. der.
NIST has collected 236 pieces of steel from the wreckage of the towers.
Using metallographic analysis, NIST determined that there was no evidence that any of the samples had reached temperatures above 600 degrees C.”
Its quite simple and clear...you don't need to be an intellectual to figure it out.
Pentagon was struck 40 minutes after the first strike in NYC without any scramblings of fighter jets to protect the skies of DC, let alone an air force base locating merely 10 miles from the white house. der.
Hasn't it been shown that steel is weakened at that temp ?
88:46 NORAD finally orders Otis to scramble two F-15's. NORAD has held on to this vital information for at least 6, 8 or 10 minutes, and probably up to 26 or 32 minutes.
8:52 Two F-15's from Otis are deployed.
9:02:54 UA175 impacts the South Tower of the WTC between the 78th and 84th floors. NORAD says the F15's from Otis are still 71 miles away. This means their average flight speed was only 23.9% of their top speed in trying to intercept UA 175. Otis is 153 miles from WTC - F15's have a top speed of 1875 MPH. Minus 71 miles from 153 miles = 82 miles covered in 11 minutes from 8:52 to 9:03
60 minutes divided by 11 minutes = 5.45 x 82 miles = 447.3 MPH divided by 1875 MPH = 23.9%.
The US spends at least 350+ billion a year on defense system. Also air force is by far and away the most technologically advanced defense system in the world. Seems like a waste, yes?
geggy, this is what your quote does not say:
"August 27, 2003: NIST Investigators Rule Out Weakened Steel as a Factor in Collapses"
Much as you'd like to interpret it that way.