Miragememories
Banned
Miragememories said:"It certainly is representative of the NIST hypothesis.
The NIST even used their belief in a single column (#79) failure as the triggering event to WTC7's collapse when testing the possible use of explosives."
R.Mackey said:"Yes, but the failure of Column 79 in NIST's hypothesis is predicated on multiple failures elsewhere in the structure.
If you took an intact WTC 7 -- which you assume, if you claim fire couldn't cause structural damage -- and set off charges to destroy that column (which is impossible, since we would have heard it), we would either not get collapse at all, or a collapse that did not resemble what was seen. The NIST report covers this."
"Multiple failures elsewhere in the structure" is a duplicitous statement intended to imply
structural failures some distance from the point in question.
You know very well that NIST was referring to failures of steel where it was joined to column 79 over several consecutive floors.
The point remains that the NIST believes collapse initiation was due to the failure of column 79, followed less than a second later by columns 80 and 81.
The NIST tested with the amount of RDX that they determined would be required to sever column 79 and achieve the same result.
Thus NIST believed the same result could be achieved if column 79 was severed, regardless of the cause.
Miragememories said:"This is irrelevant, given the NIST determination that debris damage from the collapsing towers was not a factor in the collapse of WTC7."
You wish to argue the "butterfly effect" now?R.Mackey said:"This is also not correct. While debris damage did not cause structural damage according to NIST, it did create a specific pattern of fire and ventilation. That has a strong effect on the weakening process, which is critical."
One can imagine all kinds of nuances if you wish to speculate on how non-structural damage may or may not have influenced the fires. There is simply no evidence that the existing damage made any significant difference to how the fires performed.
Why?R.Mackey said:"Had someone planted explosives, they would have to know, in advance, that the impacts and fires would create the right amount of weakening, and that it wouldn't interfere with their placed charges, if this is even possible."
The first order of business would be to make sure of a successful demolition.
The second order would be to build-in redundancy and install in a secure, protected location (the core was damn safe as well as being the necessary location).
NIST never proved anything.R.Mackey said:"In other words, the risk from such an approach would be extreme, and as NIST proves, it isn't necessary. Nor have you explained how it could be done without anyone hearing it. Without addressing these issues, the hypothesis is DOA."
Had they proved their point, we wouldn't be having this discussion and possibly the world wouldn't be currently on the verge of another Depression.
In other words, if 9/11 had not been an inside job, I don't think the U.S. and the rest of the world would be in the current financial predicament.
All NIST did was present "a" theory and gave their reasons for supporting it.
It would appear that the last argument protecting the NIST theory is; "well it had to be the fire
because we didn't hear the explosions on the videos".
Well the validity of that point is in dispute and it certainly is a weak case for the NIST to present
after so many years of vacillation.
Miragememories said:"Barry Jennings heard and experienced what appeared to be an early preparatory
explosion that destroyed his stairwell escape route and occurred prior to the collapse of either tower."
I wasn't aware that I had presented what you believed to be my attempt at a hypothesis?R.Mackey said:"Your hypothesis does not appear to require any "preparatory explosives."
How do you explain this?
It's very hard to respond to your hypothesis if you don't state it."[/i]
I termed what Barry Jenning's experienced as "the appearance of a preparatory explosion"
because no other rational explanation has been proffered.
This is another instance of a powerful explosion, powerful enough to blowout a concrete and steel stairwell, experienced firsthand by two people, and yet unheard by firefighters and camera crews outside the building.
Miragememories said:"It's quite possible that fires did destroy some demolition preparations and it's logical that there was significant redundancy built into the plan."
R.Mackey said:"So... if you accept that some explosives could have been destroyed, how would you rig it to be fail-safe, let alone fail-operable, under a variety of fire situations?"
We have no evidence of debris or fire damage to WTC7's core, and little reason to have expected any.
Therefore, there appeared to be little risk to any core configured demolition.
Again, what theory did I present?R.Mackey said:"Basically what you've done here is admitted that the fire is a problem for your theory, then stated without any support that it's a solvable problem. And, as before, you have no evidence for explosives, whereas we have sonic evidence that there were no explosives. You're not making progress."
I'm questioning the validity of the NIST WTC7 theory.
Providing an alternative theory is not a prerequisite for challenging an existing theory.
Sonic evidence?
How valid is that when it's known that much sonic evidence was there but never recorded.
The NIST is using the absence of recorded sound as proof that it did not exist. There are witnesses that claim otherwise.
If Barry Jennings and Michael Hess could experience a loud destructive explosion in the 6th floor core which no one on the street heard, or recorded as sonic evidence, is it not possible that additional core explosions occurred throughout the day leading up to a final core failure at 5:20 p.m.?
Miragememories said:"This assumes that a single column failure was the plan. This ignores the greater likelihood that a single column failure was never part of the plan."
R.Mackey said:"OK, now I'm confused. Above you claimed it could be rigged for single column failure."
It was the NIST that concluded that a failure of column 79 was the initiating cause for the complete collapse of WTC7.
Therefore according to the NIST, logically, anything that achieved that failure would cause the same result.
That does not mean that a controlled demolition of WTC7 was based on the NIST's theorized collapse initiation cause.
A plan that required a total core failure from controlled demolition, would still result in the failure of column 79 and would not require any pre-knowledge of column 79's vulnerability in order to succeed.
The NIST is saying column 79's failure would bring about the core's collapse and I'm saying a demolition of the core would by necessity force column 79 to fail.
R.Mackey said:"Now you say that might not be the plan at all, i.e. WTC 7 was rigged to collapse but failed by surprise...
What is your hypothesis? You seem to contradict yourself very badly here."
You appear to be confused, deliberately or otherwise.
I've never said the plan centered around the failure of column 79.
I've merely addressed the point that NIST theorized that WTC7 collapsed because of column 79's failure.
There is no contradiction unless you feel writing the words is enough to make them legitimate?
Miragememories said:"Since fire had never before accomplished what the NIST claimed it did on 9/11,
it's logical to assume that a planned demolition would not have any dependence on fire damage."
R.Mackey said:"I don't follow your logic at all. According to you, the perpetrators planted explosives, and deliberately failed to detonate them until long after WTC 7 started burning. NIST proves that the fire would have significantly weakened the structure, which is inherently obvious. Your comment above suggests they either couldn't anticipate this damage, or they diverged from their original plan on purpose.
Pretty strange."
You don't, or won't follow my logic?
What reason would the demolition planners have for expecting the core to be damaged placing their work at risk?
The NIST never observed or noted any core damage.
The NIST never proved that fire significantly weakened the structure but postulated that it must have, since
their theory is solely fire-based.
There is nothing "inherently obvious" that proves WTC7 was so significantly weakened by fire that total
collapse was a reasonable expectation, unless one was already suspicious about the collapses of WTC1 and WTC2..
Miragememories said:"All they had to do was prep with enough redundancy to allow for unforeseen damage."
R.Mackey said:"I don't believe this was simple. Show me."
I don't understand your confusion?
As a NASA engineer you must be quite familiar with system redundancy?
Miragememories said:"The core, being the least vulnerable area to fire and debris damage would be the likely area to target."
R.Mackey said:"The core is the only place to target. The perimeter is too visible, and there aren't any other choices."
Duh.
That's what I've been saying all along.
Miragememories said:"The failure of column 79 could very well have been an unforeseen consequence of the planned demolition."
R.Mackey said:"I'm having trouble believing in a demolition approach -- allegedly a stealthy, efficient one -- that accidentally triggered the terminal building mode. Again, you'll have to explain this to me."
Who said anything about "accidental"?
And I doubt I can explain it to you because I'm not convinced that your mind is open to anything contrary to your beliefs.
Basically, you are stating that you don't believe it was possible to devise a means of surreptitiously gaining access to the building core prior to 9/11.
This is old ground and I really don't wish to list the possible methods such a covert operation might employ.
I know your an engineer, but use some imagination. This isn't rocket science.
Miragememories said:"There is no credible evidence, or theory, that explains how a 7 second major internal core failure would occur as a result of column 79 buckling, followed by columns 80 & 81 less than a second later."
R.Mackey said:"Yes there is. NCSTAR1A. If you have some valid criticism of the report, please present it. I haven't seen any yet."
Talk to Frank Greening and John D. Wyndham, PhD (Physics) for starters.
Miragememories said:"During this 7 second period, when WTC7 was collapsing internally, little more than a few broken windows were observed across the clearly visible expanse of the north face of WTC7."
R.Mackey said:"Explainable by building flexure. No explosive sounds. Also, a single explosive on Column 79 wouldn't be expected to cause this pattern of window breakage. If you still think this observable supports your (still unstated) hypothesis, please explain."
That's an interesting point you raised there.
"No explosive sounds."
7 seconds of complete internal carnage of the steel core and no sonic evidence.
Also, I'm talking about more than a subtle pattern of window breakage.
It's theorized by NIST, that the interior is totally collapsing for 7 seconds, and in spite of all the connectivity to the outside perimeter, you feel outside the building, a pattern of window breakage is the only logical view to be expected?
Not even a few 'bowed perimeter columns'?
Or maybe the real total collapse occurred after that 7 seconds?
Miragememories said:"Inside WTC7, for this 7 seconds, we supposedly have major column failures occurring. Columns that are joined to trusses which are connected to perimeter columns that miraculously remain stable."
R.Mackey said:"Given the design of WTC 7, there's nothing miraculous about a core failure independent of the perimeter. NCSTAR1A."
Now that is truly incredible.
You are in effect saying that we have a building inside a building.
That, even though the two are firmly connected to each other, it's supposedly credible that the inside structure underwent 7 seconds of collapse without visibly pulling in any of the the connected exterior walls.
And you are an engineer?
MM