Java Man
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2010
- Messages
- 1,689
(not to mention the behavior of the flow).
If only you knew.
Please explain then
(not to mention the behavior of the flow).
If only you knew.
Way past that point. This has been explained hundreds of times. By the way, that color comparison picture you posted, It debunks you.Please explain then
Because I believe the thin fuselage skin can oxidize very quickly and not melt. He believes otherwise. I err in his favor asking for a much smaller surface area for him to identify than is really needed. He can't do that. What's the point of following up on the remainder of his post? Let him show me the molten area and be done with it. But he can't. Even when I err in his favor.
You're wrongly assuming it's the fire that melted it. But if thermite or some other agent was used a hot enough fire isn't needed.
Take a look at this picture for color reference:
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/58031
Way past that point. This has been explained hundreds of times. By the way, that color comparison picture you posted, It debunks you.
If only you paid attention.
That is a novel idea but it is not part of the game....If only you paid attention.
Your reading comprehension is poor. I said "By the way, that color comparison picture you posted, It debunks you".Well feel free to explain it again for clarity. And no the color comparison by no means debunks me.
Thermite, and more specifically whatever vessel was used to house the thermite, wouldn't survive the impact and fireball.
True. And don't forget the ignition system which is more sensitive than the majestical thermatriotonic material itself.
And, interestingly, the delivery vessel would not survive the thermite itself at the volumes required.
And let's not mention that these <cough> 'delivery vessels' would be sticking out of walls into workspaces all over WTC1+2
To summarise: it's all a crock of thermitic residues.
Iron begins to cool rather quickly once it moves away from the source of the heat which melted it, but it goes through some gradation of color as it cools. What we see falling from the towers seems to go from bright yellow to silver or clear rather quickly, within a space less than the height of the tower. This is consistant with aluminum or glass. Iron would go through a significat red-hot period on the way down . It does not. Further, iron is not liuquid at the color we see.I'm more and more convinced that it is steel. It's more understandable that what we see is steel under the effect of a burning agent like thermite than molten aluminium or glass that somehow manages to stay vertical and radiate that yellowish hue out.
So you're basically saying that whatever was used to contain it would not hold and that thermite would ignite on its own due to fire? No way to have control over those "delivery vessels"?
So you're basically saying that whatever was used to contain it would not hold and that thermite would ignite on its own due to fire? No way to have control over those "delivery vessels"?
Your speculation is apparently based upon a complete non-understanding of electricity. I hold no reason to believe then that you have any better grasp of any other technical concept involved.
Given your complete and utter balls-up of any understanding of electricity I find that all you have done is destroy your credibility. There is no reason to suspect you are any better with cutter charges or thermite.
However, why not provide a refutation (either yourself or link to one if it's been done before) of his "technical" claims about thermites, etc. so that other non-expert people who want to learn something can do so? I hate these kinds of "credibility" arguments because they don't provide knowledge for anyone (and I think the point of online debates like this is not necessarily to convince the other of their wrong (which is almost always impossible since if their mind is made up absolutely nothing will make them change their belief -- only they can decide to change it), but for the benefit of the audience.).
Iron would go through a significat red-hot period on the way down . It does not. Further, iron is not liuquid at the color we see.
Notice how long it stayed in the red range?I guess these folks got fooled too and sold something that isn't iron.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OWX6WAPEc8
Notice how long it stayed in the red range?
FAIL
Now now, let's give him a chance. I only asked him to start looking a few hours ago. He means serious business!!Especially when its not present !
So make it 50% gone. That's still a 20x20 m area