NIST Petition Demands Corrections

Your logic is that if I source Google to prove that 2+2 = 4 that it's a lame response, and, because it's Google..well 2+2 can't equal 4.

If I get out my crayons and figure 2+2 = 4 it's a sincere quality effort.

Your attacking me not my content. Content is content..it's either valid or it isn't! I already had postulated my point of view and searched with Google to find an illustrative example. Instead of proving my point to be in error, it becomes a back slapping session because Kent easily Google searched the example that I made little effort to hide.

Well a big congrats rocket scientists!

Is it no wonder that Dr. Greening was so disgusted by what he encountered here!


Is this getting through at all R.Mackey???

MM

I'm quoting this entire thing for posterity.

First of all, for one who makes such a fuss about "content," your post contains none that I can find.

This whole discussion is not about attitudes. It's about whether or not the NIST study is flawed. Obnoxious or beatific, one can have an opinion. If that opinion is backed by scientific understanding, so much the better. If backed by credible and verifiable calculation, it is likely to be quite useful.

In attempting to back your position, you've produced two arguments: First, your own personal opinion which is backed by nothing, that the exit or non-exit of landing gear is the biggest success criterion of simulation ("Of the 9, only ONE, the impact on the outer walls can be substantiated by the video and photographic record"). Since your opinion is unique and unsupported, all we have to go on is your expertise -- which is that of a Google-scientist. See, it matters.

Your second argument is a simple equation for energy transfer in a simple collision of two objects, culled from a treatise on the physics of martial arts. You use this equation to complain about the NIST model. However, you neglect the fact that your equation is also based on a model, because it cannot be applied without enacting key assumptions, assumptions that do not hold in the WTC case. If you had scientific training, you would know this. If you had a more critical eye towards your own capabilities, you would not be so arrogant as to assume that your karate book contained secrets of physics that were beyond anything the hundreds of professional engineers who conducted the NIST study had ever encountered.

So, in summary, I am not attacking you, I am attacking the content. I have exhaustively discussed how your assertions are invalid throughout this thread. I furthermore have now discovered why they are invalid, namely because you are out of your field, a fact that you tried to conceal through your repeated evasions.

Thus, it does matter.

The rest of the flame-baiting in your post, and all others, will be ignored.
 
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No one asked for the source.

I paraphrased the answer.

The material from the source was quite generic in nature.

Why don't you contribute something 'real' instead of spending your time searching my sources? If you had of asked me I would have told you and saved you the effort.

My argument must be effective if you are resorting to these kinds of tactics to discount it?

MM


Beachnut asked where you got the equation. You didn't answer.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2540507&postcount=477
Since you stated it wasn't from wikipedia, I thought I would show everyone the source. It's clear this has made you angry.

Not sure I have anymore more to add to some of the already excellent posts here.

BTW well said Mackey.
 
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Speaking of "content", this quote in reference to Steven Jones:

"evidently he's too wacky for even the mormons now"

taken from another thread, is hardly a good advertisement for the OCTs.

Why do people have to indulge in this kind of personal insult?

Does this kind of language dignify this debate?
 
Speaking of "content", this quote in reference to Steven Jones:

"evidently he's too wacky for even the mormons now"

taken from another thread, is hardly a good advertisement for the OCTs.

Why do people have to indulge in this kind of personal insult?

Does this kind of language dignify this debate?
Why not take that up with the individual who made the comment in another thread?
 
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Speaking of "content", this quote in reference to Steven Jones:

"evidently he's too wacky for even the mormons now"

taken from another thread, is hardly a good advertisement for the OCTs.

Why do people have to indulge in this kind of personal insult?

Does this kind of language dignify this debate?

I agree, that at times things can get a little "personal", even down right juvenile, and insulting here on this forum. It is human nature to tend toward this when you are refuting rediculous claims day in day out for months on end, like some people here.

That said, Dr. Greening, a civil discussion on some of the various 9/11 issues from a professional such as yourself always helps to bring the level of conversation up a few notches.

If you have read most of this thread, than you are aware that R. Mackey, beachnut, Mirage Memories, and others, are currently engaged in a discussion over the use, or lack there of, of the "less severe case" with respect to the global WTC impact computer models created by NIST. Care to add your scientific opinion, or non-scientific opinion, to the conversation?

TAM:)
 
Speaking of "content", this quote in reference to Steven Jones:

"evidently he's too wacky for even the mormons now"

taken from another thread, is hardly a good advertisement for the OCTs.

Why do people have to indulge in this kind of personal insult?

Does this kind of language dignify this debate?
And what does this have to do with this thread? Why don't you respond to that poster in that thread?

Speaking of debate, do you plan on actually engaging in any? You've done little so far but jump in, stir the pot, and hightail it away as soon as some of the more qualified (engineers and such) folks here engage you.

I don't know what you're here for or why, but intellectual discourse doesn't appear to be the reason.
 
And what does this have to do with this thread? Why don't you respond to that poster in that thread?

Speaking of debate, do you plan on actually engaging in any? You've done little so far but jump in, stir the pot, and hightail it away as soon as some of the more qualified (engineers and such) folks here engage you.

I don't know what you're here for or why, but intellectual discourse doesn't appear to be the reason.

You noticed that, too?
There are several comments and questions unanswered by him, even in this thread.
Are you hoping we forget, Dr. Greening?
 
You noticed that, too?
There are several comments and questions unanswered by him, even in this thread.
Are you hoping we forget, Dr. Greening?
Here's my thoughts on Greening. He's a chemist, and knows enough physics to calculate that there was enough mass in the WTC for a global collapse to pulverize concrete. But that's where his expertise ends, the details are an engineering and materials science question. But he doesn't want to let that get in the way of him discovering some great unseen problem in the collapse scenario put forth by NIST, so he finds a way to make it a chemistry problem via the iron sphericles and zinc. Not that that's not interesting, but it is likely insignificant to why and how the towers collapsed. But as the saying goes, when the only tool you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
 
AS the French would say; "exactement!"

You are quite correct!

Unfortunately, NIST did not have the landing gear exit the WTC in their simulation as it should. They let it use it's destructive potential inside the towers. Afterwards, the simulated fires were allowed to work on this false damage for 1 hour and 1.5 hours for WTC 2 and WTC 1 respectively.

This was in the extreme case scenario and it was the only scenario that the simulation produced a collapse initiation!

MM

Why do you totally ignore so many posts?

Let's say the destructive potential of the landing gear was used up in the core in the NIST simulation.
In reality, the destructive potential was used to take out a panel of 3 columns on the south wall of WTC1.

However, in the simulation, other pieces of debris hit the same panel that was knocked free on 9/11, and caused enough damage to indeed knock it free.
In reality, the destructive potential of this debris may well have been spent inside the core, but in the simulation it was spent on the south wall.

Do you understand yet?


And please answer my post that you ignored: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2540620&postcount=483

Tell us all how many simulations NIST might have to run in order to get the landing gear to exit. Tell us how long this would take.
Consider how many combinations of speed, orientation pitch and yaw, trajectory pitch and yaw, failure strain etc may have to be computed before the landing gear exits.

Dozens? Hundreds? Thousands of two week simulations?
 
And this somehow invalidates the argument?

No, but it puts serious doubt on your ability to argue by yourself. Plus it shows you don't follow the rules you agree to.

Naturally I reply to what is significant and ignore the bs.

So "significant" means "agrees with me" ?

How am I busted?

Your plagiarised post was reported. And warned, I believe.

It matters not if I find sources on the internet that provide validity to my argument.

It does if you don't give credit.

Your kind of response only reveals a lack of sincerity and an interest only in game playing.

Oh, yes. I do enjoy playing with people who are either dishonest, ignorant or unwilling to improve upon the two previous attributes.

If not for the current rigid enforcement of the JREF rules I'd have more to say about that kind of insincere post.

Words. You ignored relevant points by me and by many others. That was true. Who's incincere, now ?

Your attacking me not my content.

You seem obsessed with this kind of statement. It isn't helping your case when you make everything about yourself.
 
I'm quoting this entire thing for posterity.

First of all, for one who makes such a fuss about "content," your post contains none that I can find.

This whole discussion is not about attitudes. It's about whether or not the NIST study is flawed. Obnoxious or beatific, one can have an opinion. If that opinion is backed by scientific understanding, so much the better. If backed by credible and verifiable calculation, it is likely to be quite useful.

In attempting to back your position, you've produced two arguments: First, your own personal opinion which is backed by nothing, that the exit or non-exit of landing gear is the biggest success criterion of simulation ("Of the 9, only ONE, the impact on the outer walls can be substantiated by the video and photographic record"). Since your opinion is unique and unsupported, all we have to go on is your expertise -- which is that of a Google-scientist. See, it matters.

Your second argument is a simple equation for energy transfer in a simple collision of two objects, culled from a treatise on the physics of martial arts. You use this equation to complain about the NIST model. However, you neglect the fact that your equation is also based on a model, because it cannot be applied without enacting key assumptions, assumptions that do not hold in the WTC case. If you had scientific training, you would know this. If you had a more critical eye towards your own capabilities, you would not be so arrogant as to assume that your karate book contained secrets of physics that were beyond anything the hundreds of professional engineers who conducted the NIST study had ever encountered.

So, in summary, I am not attacking you, I am attacking the content. I have exhaustively discussed how your assertions are invalid throughout this thread. I furthermore have now discovered why they are invalid, namely because you are out of your field, a fact that you tried to conceal through your repeated evasions.

Thus, it does matter.

The rest of the flame-baiting in your post, and all others, will be ignored.

Let's see, I write a very long reply post to the several you made to me. I honestly address your points without distorted quotes or personal attacks on your credibility and what do you do?

You choose to address my later short post defending the use of karate board breaking as an illustrative example useful for describing the significance of how energy is transferred. This was valid content to questioning the NIST thread because the subject being addressed had to do with how NIST was handling aircraft components impacting inside their model.

The karate board breaking example is an excellent means of illustrating how critical the NIST simulation of impacts via energy transfer is. Strike a core steel support column with dispersed energy (equally distributed contact over a large part of it's surface area) or concentrate the same amount of energy on a smaller area of the column's surface, and you can expect distinctly different results. The energy transfer is more damaging when concentrated and the 'flat hand vs side of hand' breaking a karate board shows this.

All your wordy replies are "culls". Whatever the source of your arguments, examples, theories etc., they are all "culled" from somewhere. Unless your name is Issac Newton, I don't think you can claim ownership of much that is unique in your writings.

Resorting to how many experts worked on the NIST study and the 'how could so many people get it wrong' type of argument is really a no-argument. It's like saying a 10,000 page document has to be better than a 100 page document because it has so many more pages.

Is it too much to ask that you stay on point? That you address my responses to the many points of yours that I honestly replied to without the use of smear tactics?

MM
 
This thread is generating a disproportionate number of reports, many of which strike the Moderating Team as being petty and very minor rather then significant breaches.

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Some guidelines:

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We will be applying the stricter enforcement from the recent announcement which will mean any post that breaches the MA even in a minor way will not appear.

We will not have a record of any post that is not approved for posting as the system just deletes them. Therefore any decision made is final and cannot be appealed. Also since we will not have a record of what was not approved we will not be able to tell you why a particular post was not approved.

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Replying to this modbox in thread will be off topic  Posted By: Darat
 
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Why do you totally ignore so many posts?

Let's say the destructive potential of the landing gear was used up in the core in the NIST simulation.
In reality, the destructive potential was used to take out a panel of 3 columns on the south wall of WTC1.

However, in the simulation, other pieces of debris hit the same panel that was knocked free on 9/11, and caused enough damage to indeed knock it free.
In reality, the destructive potential of this debris may well have been spent inside the core, but in the simulation it was spent on the south wall.

Do you understand yet?


And please answer my post that you ignored: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2540620&postcount=483

Tell us all how many simulations NIST might have to run in order to get the landing gear to exit. Tell us how long this would take.
Consider how many combinations of speed, orientation pitch and yaw, trajectory pitch and yaw, failure strain etc may have to be computed before the landing gear exits.

Dozens? Hundreds? Thousands of two week simulations?

I don't ignore posts. I simply am one person and I have a life outside of this forum. I don't have time to answer every post, expecially when they amount to a flood.

Maybe if you had to field so many query posts, you might better appreciate the difficulty.

I try and answer questions that aren't rhetorical or slanderous. Sometimes I miss a source question like beachnut's because it falls at the end of an abusive statement.

Anyway, I'll try and answer your post.

Quote=Mancman
Let's say the destructive potential of the landing gear was used up in the core in the NIST simulation.
In reality, the destructive potential was used to take out a panel of 3 columns on the south wall of WTC1.

Do you understand yet?
First of all, that's not formed as a question.

But I'll make what I can out of it.

Okay, some facts first from the NIST Report;

Partial main landing gear (tire, wheel, brake assembly and hub) exited WTC 1 at an estimated speed of 105 mph after breaking through the opposite perimeter wall.pg344 NIST NCSTAR 1-2B, WTC Investigation.

Another piece
of landing gear debris, (from WTC 1) shown in Figure 9–123, was found embedded in what is postulated to be the panel containing columns 329, 330, 331, running from the 93rd to the 96th floors.

As little other damage had been documented on the south face of WTC 1, it is postulated that the landing gear debris that landed at the corner of Rector St. and West St. also exited through this panel location.
pg344-45 NIST NCSTAR 1-2B, WTC Investigation.

So, NIST is saying we are dealing here with 2 separate pieces of landing gear debris exiting the WTC 1.

They are postulating that the piece shown in the photograph of Figure 9-123, removed the perimeter panel containing columns 329, 330, and 331.
Based on limited damage documentation for the south face of WTC 1, they are then postulating that the partial main landing gear (tire, wheel, brake assembly and hub) noted first, exited through the opening created by the panel removal.

Do you understand yet?

As already noted, the partial main landing gear (tire, wheel, brake assembly and hub) exited WTC 1 at 105 mph and as NIST acknowledges, it was not the same landing gear debris you are arguing took out the perimeter panel containing columns 329, 330, and 331.

Do you understand yet?

Moving on to your other previous question that I lost in the flood.

Quote=Mancman
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2540620&postcount=483
So, in other words, you want the entire validity of the simulation to rest on a single piece of debris.

Do you not quite understand the number of variables involved?

Let's take the base case. 443mph, 10.6° trajectory pitch, 8.6° orientation pitch. Yaw is 0. In this case, the landing gear does not exit. In the more severe case, at increased speed and pitch, the gear does not exit, but significant debris impacts the south wall.

So what were NIST supposed to do exactly to get this gear to exit? Run another two week long simulation at 433mph, with 10.6° trajectory pitch, 8.6° orientation pitch and zero yaw? Suppose that one didn't have a landing gear exit. What now? 453mph with 10.6° trajectory pitch, 8.6° orientation pitch and zero yaw? 463mph with 12.6° trajectory pitch, 9.6° orientation pitch and 2.5° yaw? 457mph with 11.9° trajectory pitch, 8.1° orientation pitch and 0.5° yaw? Move the plane 1ft east and repeat all of them?

I hope you understand.
I can see now that I probably skipped your question because I thought I had adequately responded to it in previous replies to other posts, and indeed you quote the answer in this post you want answered.

NIST admits that minor aircraft entry corrections would significantly improve the match with the video and photographic record.

"None of the three WTC 2 global impact simulations resulted in a large engine fragment exiting the tower. However, the impact behavior suggests that only minor modifications (lowered 1-2 ft.) would be required to achieve this response." NIST NCSTAR 1-2B, WTC Investigation pg353.

Addressing your single piece of debris and it's importance to the validity of the NIST WTC simulation.

There is debris that is inconsequential and then there is debris that is quite consequential.

Most of each aircraft's non-fuel components were comprised of relatively weak materials that fragmented upon passing through the first perimeter wall. At high velocity, they sprayed the interior of each tower but were unable to focus enough energy transfer to damage the core columns.

The most damaging aircraft components were the heavy titanium steel engines and landing gear that would have remained largely intact after passing through the first perimeter wall of each tower.

The amount of damage they did to the core columns was critical to the collapse initiation outcome.

We know 2 separate pieces of landing gear debris exited WTC 1.


But the NIST Report states;
No portion of the landing gear was observed to exit the tower in the simulations, but rather was stopped inside, or just outside, of the core.
(NCSTAR 1-2B, p.345)

We know 1 separate piece of landing gear debris exited WTC 2.
We know an entire engine exited WTC 2.

But the NIST Report states;

No landing gear debris exited the building in either the base case or the less severe simulations.” (NCSTAR 1-2B, p.353)

None of the three WTC 2 global impact simulations resulted in a large
engine fragment exiting the tower.
” (NCSTAR 1-2B, p.353)

So in both towers, we have these destructive titanium steel components from the impacting aircraft wrongfully doing damage in the NIST simulation, when in reality, they should not be involved.

The 2 aircraft effectively representied 8 major destructive components, 4 sets of landing gear and 4 engines.

The successful NIST collapse initiation simulations used all 8 destructive components in order to match what happened on 9/11.

In reality, only 4 of these destructive components should have been used in the simulation, 1 set of landing gear and 3 engines.

I hope you understand?

MM
 
The new moderation guidelines suggest to me that this thread has passed its "sell-by" date. However, I am prepared to discuss this topic openly with anyone, and I am also curious about the outcome of the moderating experiment. In that spirit, I will honor your request, MirageMemories.

Let's see, I write a very long reply post to the several you made to me. I honestly address your points without distorted quotes or personal attacks on your credibility and what do you do?

...

Is it too much to ask that you stay on point? That you address my responses to the many points of yours that I honestly replied to without the use of smear tactics?
I am assuming you are referring to this post of yours. Very well, I will do as you ask, and respond to every single point in that post, without the merest scent of smear tactics.

Regarding my supposed misquotes from your replies, that was not intentional. In the interest of brevity, I only quoted what I thought was the essence of your message. I'm sorry it's so tedious.
Apology accepted. I find that when in doubt, quoting a larger block in context and eschewing any alteration of the quote text is an effective means to prevent misinterpretation.

Your statement was confusing and lacked clarity so I applied it as best I could. To me, "does not agree very well" and "but it's not bad" don't co-exist well and frankly contradict each other.
As I stated a page before your reply, if you substitute "perfectly" for "very well" my intent should become clear.

Is a large mass supposed to equate to a unified mass or just a large accumulation of aircraft particles? By saying that with a few tweaks, within the margin of observational error, that the mass could be the landing gear, do you mean it could have the equivalent mass or actually could be physically characteristic of the actual landing gear? It's a very important distinction.
Because the model is homogeneous, actually there is no distinction. Nevertheless, the simulation suggests that moving the point of impact a few feet horizontally or vertically, which is well within the margin of observational error, would make it possible for the "actual landing gear" to break loose. This is what NIST is saying on page 343 of NIST NCSTAR1-2B (page 149 of the PDF). Also, consider the different engine trajectories experienced with only slight vertical changes presented in Figure 5-19, page 107 (page 203 of the first half PDF). This demonstrates quite clearly how minute changes of input conditions give rise to significant differences in the evolution of individual components.

Again I apparently misquoted you about massive chunks of aircraft. You are very easy to misquote unfortunately..or slippery.

Anyway, in the more severe case "chunks" of something, apparently from the aircraft, was comparable in size to the landing gear or a wheel and that for you, this was in excellent agreement.
That's correct. Because the aircraft model is homogeneous, the source location of an individual piece of debris is far less relevant than the total amount of debris that passes through the building. As you have argued yourself, the principal issue is one of energy transfer. Since the total amount of debris pass-through in the baseline and more severe cases plausibly matches the actual event, whereas the less severe case shows virtually nothing making it across the core, let alone the whole structure, NIST (and I) conclude that the less severe case is the worst fit out of the three cases.

In the case of the WTC 2 simulation, in the more severe case, a chunk of simulated landing gear exited at a velocity higher than, but not impossible compared to, the estimates of the real event (230 MPH simulated vs. 102 MPH estimated real-world, pp. 350-351 or 155-156 of the part 2 PDF). There was no exit of landing gear in the baseline or less severe cases, though there was substantial exit of other debris in the baseline case.

Therefore, if we were to follow your line of reasoning, you must conclude that, in the case of WTC 2, only the more severe case fits. WTC 1 is still blurry by your standard.

Well I've looked at the their graphics and see the progression of the aircrafts through the towers. It's not particularly clear to me how they can be sure that what appears to be a small amount of debris exit is actually from the aircraft, or pieces from inside the building when it was impacted by pieces of the aircraft?
NIST can be quite sure of this because elements in their model are labeled. They have more than just those graphics to go on. When NIST says, as they do on page 284 (page 90 of the PDF): "The less severe impact produced little content damage on the far side of the core and did not extend fully through the tower. Little or no debris penetration of the south wall of the tower was expected for the less severe impact condition." -- you may be sure they have adequate tools to make that determination.

It's important because particles or groups of particles would not be as significant as a large object known to definitely come from the aircraft. As we know, the only aircraft components capable of remaining relatively intact were the heavy steel components like the titanium engine and landing gear. The rest of the aircraft and it's contents, due to lack of material strength would have become part of the debris cloud.
There are several errors of reasoning here. First, there are other structures in the aircraft that are both massive and with high material strength, such as the main spar, the RAT, and primary oxygen supply.

Second, being massive and high strength did not guarantee that those components would exit intact -- between the two aircraft, we have a total of four engines and six sets of landing gear, out of which only fragments of two engines and one landing gear passed through clealy, with another main gear fragment getting wedged into the exterior columns before falling free.

Third, the strength of components is not the dominant factor in damage estimation, as we will revisit below. As a brief example that I explained to you before, liberated fuel did plenty of damage, despite having virtually zero material strength. Momentum is the key, momentum that cannot escape the impact zone simply because the event is so large and so fast.

I think NIST definitely erred in using a homogeneous model. It unfairly describes the aircraft, and when combined with the model failing to confirm the only major observable criteria, the exiting engine and landing gear, it raises justifiable concerns when only their extreme case scenario succeeded in a collapse initiation.
Several problems with reasoning here as well, all of them brought up by me as early as the first page of this thread.

NIST had no choice but to use a homogeneous model. We accept and declare this as a limiting assumption. I note that your early complaints did not include this, but rather you are echoing my acknowledgement of it.

Regardless, whether or not that assumption is a flaw depends on a sensitivity analysis of the results. This is precisely why NIST ran three cases, and varied the ductility of the aircraft considerably (+/- 25% in the case of WTC 1) to see the effects. What they found was that ductility had only a minor effect on the overall results. The damage in all three cases is driven by the pitch angle of the aircraft, and other factors such as speed, weight, and material strength have only a slight effect. This is evidence that, contrary to your assertion, the homogeneous assumption is valid. It does not introduce a significant amount of uncertainty when compared to the other, irreducible uncertainties in the model. I was surprised to find this, but I accept NIST's conclusion in this respect.

Another major reasoning error is that you refer to engine and landing gear exit above as "the only major observable criteria," which they are not. I explained to you at length in this post the wide range of selection criteria, and among them NIST considers the final disposition of engine and gear fragments to be a relatively (but not completely) unimportant observable.

And, as explained back on Page 1, recall that the non-exit of such components means they were stopped by the core, and that means the core suffered less damage than it did in reality. Therefore, any simulation that does not end with those fragments exiting stage right is an underestimate. This, again, biases us towards the more severe simulations. Yet somehow, you conclude the exact opposite.

I disagree that the jet fuel, even at 570 mph, as in the extreme case scenario, had enough concentratible momentum to cut the towers steel perimeter columns.
I'm not familiar with the word "concentratible" when speaking of momentum.

I disagree with your disagreement. The work of Purdue University confirms that, in aircraft impacts, the blow dealt by the aircraft structure is secondary compared to the effect of the fuel inside.

Furthermore, the NIST NCSTAR1-2B also discusses the fuel impact, in its simplified core analysis in Chapter 10. Please turn to the P-I chart, figure 10-5, on page 374 (180 of the PDF). The impulse provided by the fuel is seen to be enough to fail core columns, not just the weaker perimeter columns.

Unless you can support your disagreement, these analyses stand.

That argument may have merit when debating the downward forces acting on the towers at the point of collapse initiation but I feel it is less compelling when dealing with these lateral "slicing" forces.
As above, you have not supported why you find it "less compelling." NIST has described in detail why material strength of impacting materials is not the deciding factor. As shown above, the fuel itself, having virtually zero material strength, is capable of inflicting enormous structural damage.

Yes trajectory of course factors into what lines up with what, and therefore will determine where the relatively clear paths to the exit perimeter wall lay. The major stopper for large, heavy, materially strong objects prior to a clean exit, is of course the heavy steel core columns. Certainly they had the capacity to stop engines and landing gear, while obviously sustaining significant damage to themselves in the process. The fact that a jet engine and landing gear did in fact break through the opposite steel perimeter walls and exit the towers at over 100+ mph indicates a lot of core damaging aircraft components failed to do what the NIST simulation indicates they must have done.
Emphasis added for clarity. That's exactly correct, but it supports my conclusion, not yours. The NIST less severe and baseline cases indicated the core columns etc. stopped those large fragments. Therefore, those cases either underestimated the severity of impact, or overestimated the strength of those elements. In either case, it means we must prefer the more severe simulations over the less severe ones. That's precisely what I've been saying this whole time.

You are arguing energy totals as the key ingredient and I disagree. Certainly the total energy is something to be considered and given a large enough energy budget, the landing gear and the engines could be ruled out as inconsequential in the greater scheme of things.
I'm not saying the landing gear and engines are inconsequential. I'm saying they are indistinguishable in the model. Whether it's those specific fragments or other fragments, so long as the energy total is the same, we expect the model results to be valid.

The fact that the less severe and base scenarios failed to create a collapse initiation indicates there wasn't an overwhelming energy budget available.

No, it does not. The eventual collapse involved additional steps, simulating the fires and their effects on the structure. At this stage of calculation, NIST evaluated the less severe and baseline scenarios against other observable evidence, and found they were not the best fit -- independent of the ultimate finding of the investigation.

Additionally, as remarked above, the biggest factor in the simulation is the pitch angle of the aircraft. The energy budget isn't really the issue, it's where that budget goes. If the aircraft is pitched down, as in the less severe case, it expends too much energy on floor slabs, which reduces damage on core columns and doesn't match the clear pictures we have of sagging floors, damaged but still attached and contributing to the collapse. Also, as Dr. Greening calculated, the aircraft had sufficent energy to completely destroy (pg. 10-11) an entire floor's worth of core columns, had it hit with the right geometry and avoided the other energy sinks present.

The columns were vulnerable to focused energy and less vulnerable to dispersed energy of the same amount. Think of a karate chop. The same amount of energy delivered with the flat of the hand (large surface area) vs. the side of the hand (small surface area), when striking a board is going to produce two different results. I won't insult your intelligence by explaining that further.

If you were to concentrate the entire impacting energy of the aircraft into a single point, it would be certain to slice clean through the building, but that doesn't mean distributed forces can be neglected. It's not true. Distributed forces were responsible for nearly all of the damage to the core columns. Again, read Chapter 10 of NIST NCSTAR1-2B.

Because the aircraft was severely damaged on impact, there are few solid masses left to deliver these "concentrated" blows. Because few solid masses flew out the other side, and those that did were decelerated considerably, we conclude those masses delivered nearly all of their energy.

"Aircraft debris external to the towers (landing gear for WTC 1 and landing gear and engine for WTC 2) as documented by photographic evidence."
xc NIST NCSTAR 1-2B, WTC Investigation

NOT engine fragments but the whole heavy titanium steel engine!

Which only serves to support my contention that NIST over compromised their Model!
Again, backwards. If NIST had overcompromised their model, their model would predict more debris exiting the structure, not less.

A complete heavy titanium steel engine in the case of WTC2, not just fragments which only lessens the apparent significance!

Ditto.

Not a big deal? Malcontents? Excuse me for not rolling over and accepting every word of the NIST conclusions. The global results of the NIST simulations are surprisingly accurate? I guess accuracy is based on the fact that sure enough, NIST tweaked the extreme case scenario and sure enough the towers fell. just like in reality..case closed.

Again, the global results of the NIST impact simulations were compared to numerous observations, none of which was whether or not the towers fell. That conclusion depends on other, later scenarios.

I am impressed by NIST's beautifully presented final report. It looks sweet doesn't it? 10,000 marvelous pages of professional excellence! Who could not love text that looks so good? Well I hate to tear the wrapping paper but the bottomline is the content.

As stated above, your misgivings about the content appear to be rooted in personal incredulity, which is not tempered by professional experience, training, or calculations. I freely admit it is not perfect, indeed I outlined in detail my concerns, but even if we follow your arguments we should agree with their conclusion -- that the more severe trial is the best fit out of the three, for both WTC 1 and WTC 2.

I'm sorry, it doesn't matter if 9,999 pages of the report are true, if one page of critical flaws remain.

That depends, but thus far you have not demonstrated a single flaw.

Which makes their results and conclusions all the more subject to question!
I hope I haven't distorted your quotes this time.
I have no issue with questioning the NIST results. I encourage it. What I am endeavoring to counteract are misunderstandings of what those results are, and the illogical conclusions drawn from this misapprehension.

NONE!

I place more importance on the only proven observable than you do!
As I have asked you repeatedly, and you still have not answered, one of the three cases is the best fit to what we observed. We need to select one before we can proceed. NIST selected the most severe cases and justified their choices. I agree with them. You have not disagreed, instead you reject selecting any of the three.

And as explained above, the final distribution of landing gear is not the only proven observable, nor is it even the most significant.

Regarding NIST and pdf page numbers, I know the difference and I always reference to the NIST page numbers which are clearly marked. If I was in error in saying you didn't do this, I apologize.

Yes I made a typo on elastic/inelastic.

Apology accepted and correction acknowledged.

I am well aware that there was a "cloud" of objects moving at high velocity inside the towers once the aircraft disintegrated after punching through the perimeter wall.

Just because I isolated the effect of one object, does not negate my point about deformation damage as invalid.

Some of the objects were trapped inside the WTC and some of the objects punched the perimeter walls, making high velocity exits, carrying their remaining destructive potential with them.

Diffused energy due to a high velocity spread of small, relatively soft particles is not going to have the potential for deformation damage that large relatively intact titanium steel jet engines and landing gear will.
Again, you state this from personal incredulity. It is not true. The majority of impact damage in the core was due to "diffused energy," essentially a pressure load on the columns themselves. This is because the aircraft almost completely shattered as it smashed through the perimeter columns.

Focused energy is more damaging to the core than distributed energy.
It isn't in this case because the focused energy was a very small fraction of the total. Had the aircraft been unloaded, empty of fuel, etc., the significance of the landing gear and engines would have been greater.

I won't argue that liquid moving at high speed carries significant mass and thus significant force, momentum and transferable energy. Since the bulk of fuel is carried inside the wings, it's impact force will be significantly spread out while being further lessened by contact with office components and interior walls. I really question how much impact damage the jet fuel had on critical building structural members.
The NIST report answers this question.

I have no wish to go off on a tangent by including the Pentagon in this discussion.
A pity, because besides the Pentagon, I am unaware of even a single other example where a fueled aircraft hit an office building at cruising speed. These are very rare situations we're talking about, and the Pentagon is perhaps the best parallel that exists.

However, if you decide to read the Pentagon BPR, you will discover that, just like the WTC cases, the structure shows almost no signs of column damage due to blunt impact. The majority of columns that failed in the Pentagon interior failed because of so-called "distributed loads." This is yet more evidence that your assertions above, that the massive fragment trajectories dictate damage in the WTC cores, is totally incorrect.

No doubt in the volume of posts I have omitted replys to some of your questions. If my answers are important to you, I suggest you re-ask or move on.
I have asked my questions several times. I am also quite aware that you have seen them, because you replied to both of them without giving me an answer. However, I sympathize with the sheer weight of this discussion, although you did ask for clarity and thoroughness, which I have now delivered. Let me then restate the question, carefully and thoroughly:

The NIST impact model, captured in NIST NCSTAR1-2, is principally concerned with the state of the core columns immediately following aircraft impact. This is because the perimeter columns were photographed, allowing a direct assessment of their status, whereas the core was impossible to inspect. To this end, NIST created a simulation of each impact. Each impact had multiple uncertainties with respect to the state of the aircraft and the relative strength of both aircraft and structure.

NIST therefore created three cases for each simulation. The baseline contained the best guess for all of the uncertain parameters above. The less severe case contained a reasonable lower bound (think of this as "one sigma") for all uncertain parameters. The more severe case contained a reasonable upper bound (except for WTC 2, it was forced closer to the baseline). The results from all three trials were compared against each other to ascertain sensitivity, and to the catalogue of observations to determine which was closest to reality.

Before proceeding, NIST had to decide which one was the best fit. In both cases, NIST decided the more severe case was the best fit, and furthermore concluded it was in acceptable agreement with observations.

Here's the question: Which one do you think is the best fit? And why? Like NIST, you must choose one, and only one answer.

Thank you for your careful attention.
 
No, but it puts serious doubt on your ability to argue by yourself. Plus it shows you don't follow the rules you agree to.



So "significant" means "agrees with me" ?



Your plagiarised post was reported. And warned, I believe.



It does if you don't give credit.



Oh, yes. I do enjoy playing with people who are either dishonest, ignorant or unwilling to improve upon the two previous attributes.



Words. You ignored relevant points by me and by many others. That was true. Who's incincere, now ?



You seem obsessed with this kind of statement. It isn't helping your case when you make everything about yourself.

I do argue for myself but I have no issue with you or anyone else drawing on an example that someone else has used if it helps explain a point more effectively. You make it sound like this whole thread is founded on the use of a karate board illustration.

Anytime you want me to provide a source for a statement I will. I had nothing to hide in using that example and it never occurred to me that it was going to excite everyone so much. Apparently breaking karate boards is big news here and I should have filled everyone in on my Google knowledge source. I apologize for that extreme lapse in judgment.

Significant means it's a judgment call. I was unaware that you replied to every single point that was directed to you in spite of how many times you might have already replied to it?

My post was a paraphrase of a subject, "breaking karate boards" that is virtually common knowledge. My son has a black belt in karate. I am very familiar with karate board breaking. Are you so petty that the best rebuttal you can make to my presentation is an accusation of plagiarism regarding a karate board breaking example?

My example of the karate board was inspired by the pdf created by Jon Chananie of the University of Virginia as printed in the JOURNAL OF HOW THINGS WORK in the Fall of 1999. He did make a few errors that I had to correct and I thought I sufficiently paraphrased the small portion of his 4 page document that I used to avoid guilt of plagiarism. The formula which I used, was one that I believed was in the public domain and if that is not the case, I regret using it without crediting him with it's authorship!

I honestly try to reply to content and ignore that which is directed at me personally.

MM
 
Correction to Mancman Reply

The 2 aircraft effectively representied 10 major destructive components, 6 sets of landing gear and 4 engines.

The successful NIST collapse initiation simulations used all 10 destructive components in order to match what happened on 9/11.

In reality, only 6 of these destructive components should have been used in the simulation, 3 sets of landing gear and 3 engines.

It never pays to rush a reply.

MM
 
I don't ignore posts. I simply am one person and I have a life outside of this forum. I don't have time to answer every post, expecially when they amount to a flood.

Dodge-and-attack combo.

You make it sound like this whole thread is founded on the use of a karate board illustration.

Me ? When did I mention the karate board analogy ? I wasn't even aware of it until now. All I knew is that the article and your post seemed identical, and therefore that your post was in violation of your membership agreement.

Significant means it's a judgment call.

So "significant" doesn't mean "agrees with me" but "that I agree with" ? What's the difference ?

My son has a black belt in karate. I am very familiar with karate board breaking. Are you so petty that the best rebuttal you can make to my presentation is an accusation of plagiarism regarding a karate board breaking example?

If you find enforcing the rules of the house "petty", then there isn't much to say.

My example of the karate board was inspired by the pdf created by Jon Chananie of the University of Virginia as printed in the JOURNAL OF HOW THINGS WORK in the Fall of 1999. He did make a few errors that I had to correct and I thought I sufficiently paraphrased the small portion of his 4 page document that I used to avoid guilt of plagiarism.

That's actually even worse. Now only did you plagiarise, but you also altered a copyrighted text to make it appear original.

I honestly try to reply to content and ignore that which is directed at me personally.

Good. Then you can safely ignore this post.
 
The 2 aircraft effectively representied 10 major destructive components, 6 sets of landing gear and 4 engines.

The successful NIST collapse initiation simulations used all 10 destructive components in order to match what happened on 9/11.

In reality, only 6 of these destructive components should have been used in the simulation, 3 sets of landing gear and 3 engines.

It never pays to rush a reply.

MM
You posted how things work which blows this post out of the water. It is energy and you have failed to understand why you are supporting very biased people who are just telling lies and this petition is not valid. Your very post from how things work even says it is energy. You fail to learn what even you, by mistake, have been teaching.

Mistake, because you have no idea what it all means. You are trying to teach physics and you have, but you have failed to learn. You are the teacher showing it is energy, and saying it is not. You are funny.

The major energy sources for impact include people, fuel, and just the airplane.

Just like you taught us from "how things work", even a hand can break hard things. You are failing to support the petition. Instead you have proven the petition to be bad. You have done it and you have no idea what you have done. Please dig up some more proof showing the petition what is really is, junk.
 

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