Belz...
Fiend God
Has MM forsaken us ?
This was just getting good !
This was just getting good !
That's fine. To Miragememories, in case you merely forgot about thsi thread, you are welcome to rejoin the conversation at any time.
I'd like to press on, however, since this thread gathered more interest and went quite a bit longer than I expected it to. I think it needs some closure. Let me then revisit my last question:
Originally Posted by R.Mackey![]()
Now let me restate my question, thus: The landing gear started in the body of the aircraft at left; this is "Point A." The landing gear exited at or very near the red rectangle at right; this is "Point B." You have claimed that the landing gear got from "Point A" to "Point B" without damaging the core. How do you think this happened?
Obviously we have no examples of intact landing gear outside the towers so clearly the landing gear sections that were found were likely damaged by contact inside the tower. The most likely subjects for causing this damage would be the core and the opposite perimeter wall. Keep in mind the landing gear was inside the wing during impact so that profile would have been a factor in how, and how much it made contact after breaking through the first perimeter wall which could very well have sheared or partially fractured a landing gear strut.Quote=Miragememories in reply to Mancman
The nose gear possibly could behave similarly, as possibly could main landing gear if 'sheared' by a core column during passage.
To answer this question, I propose the answer is that it is impossible.
My reasoning is as follows: Consider my figure in the post quoted above. We have a pretty solid estimate of where the landing gear entered the building and where it exited. So what happened in between?
We know the landing gear came in contact with structural elements at some point. There is just no way for it to get from one side to the other without doing so. The core is a mesh of cross members and columns spaced about 15 feet side to side, and 12 feet high. If the aircraft had hit it flat and level, lucky objects as big as perhaps ten feet square could have made it through, if they were perfectly aligned -- but the incoming aircraft is looking at this at a ten degree angle. This means that anything that enters the core will exit on a different floor than it arrived, as seen in the diagram.
Using these estimates, the widest "slot" of daylight that any piece will see is a mere 2.6 feet high from its perspective. Or at least it would, if there wasn't a substantial floor present in the core. But the floors make no difference for purposes of this argument, since the landing gear, entering sideways, is almost four feet across. It simply won't fit.
Ever play one of those carnival games, where you try to throw a baseball through a just-barely-bigger-than-a-baseball hole? Ever win anything?
Me either. This situation is far worse.
Since we know the landing gear contacted the core, we also know that it damaged the core. The landing gear passed essentially straight through the structure, indicating little elasticity in its collisions. Furthermore, it has sufficient momentum to exceed the column P-I limits as expressed in NIST NCSTAR 1-2B, chapter 10. It is likely that the landing gear was itself heavily damaged after the initial contact with the core, so perhaps it inflicted only minor damage later in its path -- but at some point it had to hit the core, and hit it hard.
There are two other clues. The pieces that exited all showed extreme damage. We do not expect main gear, buried deeply in the back of the aircraft, to be destroyed by the perimeter columns, since the nose and fuselage of the plane should have cleared that out.
We also do not expect the building interior to have had much effect, since its trajectory was hardly deviated by anything, including the much stronger structural elements. However, if the landing gear had inflicted no damage on the core, we would expect it to hit the far perimeter more or less intact. It did not. Only one wheel and part of the carriage made it through, not even a quarter of the landing gear's original structure. Also, we would have expected the landing gear to exit with much more speed, had it not experienced major impacts inside the structure. Its exit speed was estimated at about a quarter of its entry speed.
If you crash a thousand planes into a thousand WTC towers, you probably would see a landing gear set make it through the core more or less intact a few times.
High-speed collisions are complicated and difficult to predict. So are simulations. Done right, they accurately capture the "deterministic chaos" effect where minute changes to the initial conditions have significant downstream effects to a particular trajectory. Weird things can happen. This is why any model will have some inaccuracies, and we need to accept that. A point I've made here before is that we cannot accurately simulate what a single thrown die will do, and likely never will. The large scale behavior is much more important than fussing over every individual piece of debris.
Nonetheless, had this event been one of those lucky trials, we would have been able to tell by the condition of the exiting debris. It didn't happen on these flights. We know the landing gear was badly damaged, and we know the core did some if not all of it, and suffered in the process.
This argument shows that landing gear debris passing through the core means damage was inflicted on the core. This is the first step in a logical chain, that goes as follows:
1. The exit of landing gear opposite the impact, through the core, signifies damage inflicted on the core.
2. This is true for all debris, not just landing gear.Rationale: Material strength and discrete impacts are minor effects in computing impact damage. Collisions inside the building are largely inelastic, as evinced by the near straight-line trajectory of the debris path, thus energy transfer is governed by momentum and not by hardness or ultimate strength of materials in the aircraft or in the tower.
3. More debris exiting the other side of the core means more damage inflicted on the core, in the real-world scenario.Rationale: Since any individual piece exiting opposite the core is understood to have inflicted some damage according to 2. above, we can reason inductively to prove 3. rigorously -- for any impact scenario, adding a new piece of debris exiting means adding more damage, therefore the amount of damage in the new scenario is higher than that in the old scenario, for any arbitrary amount of debris pass-through.
4. More debris exiting the other side of the core means more damage inflicted on the core, in the simulation.Rationale: This is empirically observable, repeatable and testable. The NIST report shows that severity of impact is correlated with the amount of debris pass-through. There can be no doubt on this point, though this is actually the crucial observation.
5. Combining 3. and 4., an observation of more debris pass-through in the real world is best fit by a simulation of more severe impact.Rationale: Both real-world and simulation show a increase in core damage when debris pass-through is increased. Therefore, an increase in observed debris pass-through is never better fit by a simulation with lesser impact severity.
6. The best fit to the real-world observations in WTC 1 and WTC 2, out of the three cases NIST studied for each, is the most severe case.Rationale: The baseline and less severe cases show virtually no debris pass-through. There are no cases with less pass-through than zero. Since both WTC 1 and 2, real-world, experiences some pass-through, 5. above guarantees that the baseline case underestimates the impact. Since the simulation shows the correct correlation between core damage and debris pass-through, we infer that the baseline case (and thus the less severe case as well) underestimate core damage.
QED.
On the basis of this logical chain, the petition "demanding corrections" is therefore proven to be in error. Steven Jones and his friends are either willfully attempting to confuse readers, or unable to comprehend the contents of the NIST report. Their motive is not central to this discussion -- we reject their conclusions regardless of the source of their error.
Thank you again for your participation. I'll return again to clean up a few remaining details, as I promised to do last week.
The nose and the fuselage were not a 'block' in front of the 2 sets of landing gear.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/10252462f22171f3fe.jpg[/qimg]
More debris simply means more debris. Not all debris is equal as I indicated above. Since you've established the gaps between the core columns, debris arrival on the other side need not indicate any, or significant, core contact. I would argue that less debris if anything would suggest the possibility of greater core damage since it would imply the core stopped (more damaging) rather than deflected (less damaging) the debris.
WTC 2 simulated a 230 mph chunk accepted by you and NIST as landing gear which was not observed in the less severe and baseline scenarios. The WTC 2 extreme case scenario failed, strangely, to show the exit of a largely intact engine that was observed in reality. This in spite of the fact that the engine had a clear trajectory to the opposite perimeter wall and only unanchored office furniture blocking it's path. WTC 1 showed no landing gear or engine aircraft debris exit for any of the 3 scenarios.
Well, It's nice to know someone is monitoring my posting behaviour.
Keep in mind the landing gear was inside the wing during impact so that profile would have been a factor in how, and how much it made contact after breaking through the first perimeter wall which could very well have sheared or partially fractured a landing gear strut.
You haven't answered my questions, so I don't know what you believe. Certainly you haven't expained "how much," i.e. quantification of your opinions is impossible. You might want to try answering my questions sometime...And as indicated above I agree as well. I just don't agree with how much!
Keeping in mind there is no proof that this landing was 'intact' or what it's 'orientation' was when it entered the core region.
That is an assumption based on an intact landing gear and an assumed profile. It also doesn't considered the different dimensions and orientation of the nose gear.
The nose and the fuselage were not a 'block' in front of the 2 sets of landing gear.
You've misinterpreted me, but the confusion is understandable. My mistake. I will be glad to clarify.So here you admit the impossible is possible..albeit unlikely?
In a nutshell, what we don't see we have to make an educated guess about. In this case we have the NIST model to act as a tool to assist in the educated guess.
We don't know how much the core did and we don't know how much suffering the core went through.
Impossible. See above. There is no reason to expect the landing gear is heavily damaged prior to reaching the core, and there is no orientation that will get it through with only "superficial contact." You're grasping at straws.[Responding to point 1.]
Or that the landing gear was damaged and it's profile re-oriented by the first perimeter wall impact and that in it's deformed state made superficial contact with the core.
I don't really care if you accept it. You've made this assertion several times, and I've corrected you several times. I've given you theoretical and empirical evidence why the material strength and mass of individual pieces are not the dominant factors. You've stated it again, and again you refuse to support it. This has become tiresome.[Responding to point 2.]
I don't accept this as valid since material strength and mass significantly determine the damage to key building structural components. Aside from the landing gear and the engines, most of the debris was of soft low strength materials which would have had little serious effect on the core columns.
I'm amazed you tried to argue this one, because this is mathematically proveable.[Responding to point 3.]
More debris simply means more debris. Not all debris is equal as I indicated above. Since you've established the gaps between the core columns, debris arrival on the other side need not indicate any, or significant, core contact. I would argue that less debris if anything would suggest the possibility of greater core damage since it would imply the core stopped (more damaging) rather than deflected (less damaging) the debris.
[Responding to point 4.]
I will agree that the more severe the impact, the greater will be the core damage. I must note that NIST did a lot of re-thinking regarding the aircraft speed they chose in the extreme case scenarios.
NIST NCSTAR1-2 said:A speed estimate was then calculated from the individual videos. A mean value was calculated using the weighted average of the mean values. The measurement precision (the reciprocal of the variance) was used as a weight factor on the mean values. If measurements were independent, the uncertainty in the mean could be calculated by summing the individual measurement precisions, giving 443 ± 21 mph for AA 11 and 542 ± 14 mph for UAL 175. However, some uncertainties were systematic and the actual bound on the uncertainty was larger as a result. Therefore, the uncertainty range was increased to ± 30 mph and ± 24 mph for AA 11 and UAL 175, respectively. A summary of the impact conditions derived from video analysis (both complex and simplified motion analyses) is presented in Table 6–3.
NIST NCSTAR1-2 said:[Discussing the WTC 1 "more severe" case]
The parameters for the more severe WTC 1 impact scenario are compared to the corresponding parameters in the base case analysis in Table 7–3. For the flight parameters, the impact speed was 472 mph in the more severe impact scenarios, which was the upper bound obtained from the analysis of aircraft impact conditions described in Chapter 6.
NIST NCSTAR1-2 said:[Discussing the WTC 2 "more severe" case]
For WTC 2, the variations in the parameters from the base case were similar to those for WTC 1 (see Table 7–3), with two exceptions. The first exception was the introduction of the strength of the building contents as a parameter. There was less information available about the layout of building contents in the WTC 2 impact zone and therefore a larger uncertainty associated with the contents was assumed (the workstation layout from WTC 1 was used for WTC 2). Thus, in the more severe case, the contents strength was reduced to 80 percent of the baseline value.
The second exception was the failure strains for the aircraft and tower materials. For the more severe WTC 1 analysis, 125 percent and 80 percent of the baseline values were used for the aircraft and tower failure strains, respectively. For the more severe WTC 2 analysis, 115 percent and 90 percent of the baseline values were used. The more severe WTC 2 analysis was the final global impact analysis performed. Based on the previous analyses, the variation in damage levels indicated that the WTC 2 more severe impact analysis would produce impact damage state that was not viable (e.g., the amount of debris exiting the north wall). To ensure that a viable damage state was obtained, the aircraft and tower materials were adjusted to the values presented in Table 7–8.
[Responding to my point 5.]
Assumption. There is no real world evidence to quantify this core damage estimate. The simulation naturally shows more debris pass-through in the extreme case scenario as it would in any extreme plus scenarios.
[Responding to my point 6.]
WTC 2 simulated a 230 mph chunk accepted by you and NIST as landing gear which was not observed in the less severe and baseline scenarios. The WTC 2 extreme case scenario failed, strangely, to show the exit of a largely intact engine that was observed in reality. This in spite of the fact that the engine had a clear trajectory to the opposite perimeter wall and only unanchored office furniture blocking it's path. WTC 1 showed no landing gear or engine aircraft debris exit for any of the 3 scenarios.
As stated, I feel your case is flawed as is the NIST Model and all the assumptions used to support it.
It's also obvious from watching any of the numerous videos of the impacts that the landing gear were not extended. At the speeds the aircraft were estimated to be travelling, I don't believe it would have been possible to extend the gear in any case.Poster Mancman has eloquently explained your error here. The landing gear was in fact inside the fuselage at the time of impact. This should have been obvious from NIST NCSTAR1-2, which you told me you had read.
Poster Mancman has eloquently explained your error here. The landing gear was in fact inside the fuselage at the time of impact. This should have been obvious from NIST NCSTAR1-2, which you told me you had read.
To my mind, logically, if the perimeter wall lost it's integrity to the point that it could no longer support the load from above, the gradually weakening vertical support steel would gradually bend (rather than 'snap') under the weight of the floor above.
What's the difference? Something that sinks usually drops down.The floor above at that point would sink rather than drop down.
Other parts of the perimeter wall might become overwhelmed but I can't believe they would fail in instant unison and that they would 'snap' to allow the 'drop' necessary to argue an irresistible downward force.
What is your definition of "overwhelm"?Yet somehow we are to believe that the perimeter walls and internal core gave up virtually simultaneously, allowing the huge structure above 'drop' 10 feet to overwhelm the intact and steadily stronger floors below.
What force was used to halt this progression?In WTC2 prior to it's complete collapse, we clearly see the huge section above the impact zone lean and apparently about to topple free. Strangely this is 'arrested' and like the rug being pulled out from under it, it's topple is abruptly halted and it appears to 'ride' downwards on the previously intact structure that implodes below it.
I think we've reached a point where we know each other's point of view quite well.
Further case presentation is going to be more rehash.
The NIST Model is a software construction tool that is understandably built on a series of logical assumptions based on known mathematical, physics, and engineering relationships combined with reference data and laboratory test results.
My engineering background is sufficient for me to appreciate the complexity and the uniqueness of the challenge faced by NIST in attempting to reproduce computer simulations of the impact-to-collapse timeline of WTC 1 and WTC 2.
The problem with a model of this type, is that it only has to agree with one event. As you admit, it's extremely complex. The more complex the greater the uncertainty factor.
Fundamentally, we have two very large incendiary projectiles fired into two very large structures.
We don't know the exact weight, speed or trajectory of the projectiles.
We are missing data on the effected unanchored components within the structure.
We only have visual data on the entry and exit points.
We have no confirmed data regarding the damage to the inside of the structure other than amateur eyewitness accounts of collapsed drywall in the stairwells.
We do have 2 pieces of projectile debris for each structure.
We know exactly how long the structures will stood from the time of impact to the point of collapse.
The task was to create an accurate model that will react in close approximation of the real event.
A Model was created by NIST based on the most accurately possible determination of the event parameters. This is the foundation for the baseline scenario simulation. The simulation fails on both models. No projectile debris exits from either Model in the baseline scenario and the simulated structures fail to collapse in accordance with the real events time frames.
The Model is 'pushed' to an extreme but supposedly still realistic scenario.
The aircraft is made heavier, stronger and faster and the structures are made weaker. The simulations succeed and collapses are initiated although the real time exit debris event is again not matched.
It is determined that this 'lack of a match' with the known observables is not significant to the simulated outcome and that because the observed simulated collapse reasonably matches the real time observed collapse, this simulation is adopted as an accurate representation of what occurred.
Aside from the initial damage profile simulated by the extreme case scenario, the rest of the simulation result is based on the effect of various fires on the simulated damage to the structures. While the impact timeline was a few seconds at most, the fires timelines were approximately 3600 and 4200 seconds. A number of assumptions were employed. It was assumed that most of the fireproofing was removed and it was assumed that sufficiently high temperatures were reached to weaken and deform the steel to the extent that the perimeter walls failed.
I have read reports that dispute aircraft speed, likely aircraft damage, amount of fireproofing material likely to be removed and the maximum temperatures normally achievable in an office fire. I've also observed the nature of WTC 1 & 2 sudden, rapid and complete collapses.
EVEN if all the NIST assumptions were met, there are 2 major points that my incredulity cannot accept.
I don't believe it makes sense for WTC 1, the North Tower, to 'drop' 10 feet under the proposed circumstances. To my mind, logically, if the perimeter wall lost it's integrity to the point that it could no longer support the load from above, the gradually weakening vertical support steel would gradually bend (rather than 'snap') under the weight of the floor above. The floor above at that point would sink rather than drop down. Other parts of the perimeter wall might become overwhelmed but I can't believe they would fail in instant unison and that they would 'snap' to allow the 'drop' necessary to argue an irresistible downward force. Yet somehow we are to believe that the perimeter walls and internal core gave up virtually simultaneously, allowing the huge structure above 'drop' 10 feet to overwhelm the intact and steadily stronger floors below.
In WTC2 prior to it's complete collapse, we clearly see the huge section above the impact zone lean and apparently about to topple free. Strangely this is 'arrested' and like the rug being pulled out from under it, it's topple is abruptly halted and it appears to 'ride' downwards on the previously intact structure that implodes below it.
I'm well aware than in your eyes this reply amounts to no more than unsourced speculation and incredulity. For me wasting further long hours in a fruitless attempt to argue against an entrenched belief would be about as useful as beating my head against the proverbial brick wall.
Regardless, the NIST model is still only a model and the NIST explanation for the collapses of WTC 1 and 2 is only a theory. A theory that conveniently sits well with the Official Story.
MM
I don't believe it makes sense for WTC 1, the North Tower, to 'drop' 10 feet under the proposed circumstances. To my mind, logically, if the perimeter wall lost it's integrity to the point that it could no longer support the load from above, the gradually weakening vertical support steel would gradually bend (rather than 'snap') under the weight of the floor above. The floor above at that point would sink rather than drop down. Other parts of the perimeter wall might become overwhelmed but I can't believe they would fail in instant unison and that they would 'snap' to allow the 'drop' necessary to argue an irresistible downward force. Yet somehow we are to believe that the perimeter walls and internal core gave up virtually simultaneously, allowing the huge structure above 'drop' 10 feet to overwhelm the intact and steadily stronger floors below.
In WTC2 prior to it's complete collapse, we clearly see the huge section above the impact zone lean and apparently about to topple free. Strangely this is 'arrested' and like the rug being pulled out from under it, it's topple is abruptly halted and it appears to 'ride' downwards on the previously intact structure that implodes below it.
I'm well aware than in your eyes this reply amounts to no more than unsourced speculation and incredulity. For me wasting further long hours in a fruitless attempt to argue against an entrenched belief would be about as useful as beating my head against the proverbial brick wall.
Regardless, the NIST model is still only a model and the NIST explanation for the collapses of WTC 1 and 2 is only a theory. A theory that conveniently sits well with the Official Story.
MM
My engineering background is sufficient for me to appreciate the complexity and the uniqueness of the challenge faced by NIST in attempting to reproduce computer simulations of the impact-to-collapse timeline of WTC 1 and WTC 2.
The problem with a model of this type, is that it only has to agree with one event.
I have read reports that dispute aircraft speed, likely aircraft damage, amount of fireproofing material likely to be removed and the maximum temperatures normally achievable in an office fire.
Personal incredulity is ignored. You just don't have the training to be a good judge of expected behavior. This entire thread has proven that point over and over again.EVEN if all the NIST assumptions were met, there are 2 major points that my incredulity cannot accept.
I don't believe it makes sense for WTC 1, the North Tower, to 'drop' 10 feet under the proposed circumstances. To my mind, logically, if the perimeter wall lost it's integrity to the point that it could no longer support the load from above, the gradually weakening vertical support steel would gradually bend (rather than 'snap') under the weight of the floor above. The floor above at that point would sink rather than drop down.
I'm well aware than in your eyes this reply amounts to no more than unsourced speculation and incredulity. For me wasting further long hours in a fruitless attempt to argue against an entrenched belief would be about as useful as beating my head against the proverbial brick wall.
Regardless, the NIST model is still only a model and the NIST explanation for the collapses of WTC 1 and 2 is only a theory. A theory that conveniently sits well with the Official Story.
Here's how it works:
When one support fails, the weight it was carrying is immediately transferred to the other supports.
Not after a few minutes. Not after a few hours. IMMEDIATELY.
What do you think will happen when you have the minimum number of supports in place, and one fails?
The weight is transferred IMMEDIATELY to the remaining supports, and since they are insufficient to support it, they fail IMMEDIATELY. All at the same time.
We know the speed, the weight, and the trajectory of each plane.We don't know the exact weight, speed or trajectory of the projectiles.
We do have 2 pieces of projectile debris for each structure.
MM
But why do the columns fail at or around the levels where the planes crashed? The perimeter and core columns after all are basically vertical structures that span the building height.
To use an analogy, if you push down vertically on a straw, you cannot tell beforehand where it will "fail" or bend. This may be at anypoint along the straw. Why does the overloading of the WTC structure not result in any visible structural failure or damage lower down in the tower also (at "initiation")? Why does the collapse happen "floor by floor" when the support columns are vertical structures that will react as a whole to any overloading?
Thanks for the reply.Welcome to the JREF forum. These are good questions, but easy to answer.
First of all, if you look closely at the video, there is actually some damage evident several floors below the initial collapse, as some of the shock is transmitted downward and fails a few places in advance of the descending mass.
However, in general, the columns are not going to react as a whole to overloading:
- They are not solid pieces of steel, but rather sections, joined together by splices
After initiation, I agree, but at initiation itself I think it is fair to call it quasi-static. For WTC1, the NIST has the south tower columns bowing which increases the load in the rest of the structure, but I do not think they make the case that "instability progressed horizontally" very convincingly, because the columns are being loaded in a quasi-static situation - I think the straw example still applies, the failure could occur lower down.[*]We're dealing with impact rather than a gentle, quasi-static loading
True, but I still have trouble understanding how the 5100m/s wave damage is so localized. (how the waves apparently focus their energy on the next set of splices with the next splice below being unaffected for the most part)[*]Even if the columns were purely vertical and homogeneous, the vertical stress wave would propagate at a fixed speed, not instantly load the entire column. This speed is about 5100 m/s -- fast, but not infinitely fast.
I am not convinced by the NIST inward bowing theory. In any case that still leaves the sides (East & West for WTC1) which were compressed.[*]Most importantly, look at the specific failure mechanism. The columns buckle rather than being compressed to fracture. At the point of initiation, this involves an inward twisting, and this doesn't get transmitted downward efficiently.
I think it would have been interesting if the NIST had done some computer visualizations of the collapse, or built some scale models to see if these concepts are applicable in the manner you describe, or at least to validate their theory.What you're expecting is the damage progression to take the form of longitudinal waves, whereas a better model would be a Rayleigh wave. Also, the columns preferentially buckle at the top due to coincident damage to the horizontal bracing, whereas deep in the structure the bracing is intact, and the columns resist buckling by this mode until additional force and damage are applied.
Way down in the structure this no longer holds, though. This is why we saw a piece of core columns remain standing briefly after the main collapse. In that case, some columns survived, but all bracing was failed. The surviving columns then collapsed under their own weight.
No mysteries here, just deeper concepts of structural mechanics.
Regardless, the NIST model is still only a model and the NIST explanation for the collapses of WTC 1 and 2 is only a theory. A theory that conveniently sits well with the Official Story.
But why do the columns fail at or around the levels where the planes crashed? The perimeter and core columns after all are basically vertical structures that span the building height.
To use an analogy, if you push down vertically on a straw, you cannot tell beforehand where it will "fail" or bend.
This may be at any point along the straw. Why does the overloading of the WTC structure not result in any visible structural failure or damage lower down in the tower also (at "initiation")? Why does the collapse happen "floor by floor" when the support columns are vertical structures that will react as a whole to any overloading?