I still consider BV to be a limit case,
I understand that you do. Thanks for entering serious debate - something I have been trying to initiate for some time.
because under the simplifying assumption that the floors and connections were strong enough to transfer all loads to columns, column-to-column impacts would not be necessary to make the one-dimensional analysis valid.
IIRC you made those points in an earlier post. I'm not certain that I understand your reasoning but let me address the points in sequence:
(a) I will comment later on "simplifying assumptions" BUT the requirement for any such assumption is that it still adequately represents the real thing. The assumptions in BV do not validly represent the real WTC event - that is one of the central issues of confusion here.
(b) As for your specific reasoning - transfer of "all loads to columns" - such did not happen in the WTC real event nor AFAICS was it one of the explicit claims in BV. I can explore those two aspects further with you if you wish. i.e,. "what really happened" and the distinct separate issue of "what BV assumes."
(c) Then "column-to-column impacts would not be necessary":
___(i) I'm not sure about "impacts" - which seems to be a separate issue. I hope I haven't added to confusion. The distinction is between "columns involved" explanations as per the Bazant papers and "columns not (significantly) involved" explanations which are is what most of us are agreed were the real event.
___(ii) Columns "in line taking loads" is the main thrust of BV - including the "crush-down crush-up" model where the maths basis is based on "homogeneity" AKA "one-dimension" AKA "columns in line". Choose your own jargon.
It's fair enough to say they weren't that strong, but I don't see why you think it's not a limit case.
It is not a "limit case"
as used by BV in the paper BUT they link it to BZ and that adds to the confusion of many posting members who refer to it - whether Bazant et al were confused or not the paper doesn't help members here to avoid confusion.
I'm not a structural engineer, but having worked with them,
I am and I have. Sorting out the "forests v trees" issues is a lot easier - in real life - face to face - when you are the boss - and (hopefully

) right. (And grossly embarrassing when you are the boss and get it wrong

)
it is my understanding that such simplifying assumptions are often necessary to make a problem tractable, and even though they aren't "realistic" they are "close enough" to be useful
That is true but two points are relevant here:
(p) The assumptions MUST still be valid within the range of error you are able to account for. I can explain that further if it is not clear when stated to briefly - I am agreeing with your requirement - the results MUST be"close enough" to be validly useful.
(q) The situation here is actually a lot simpler than most are reading it. And it is because of the overlaying "need" to ridicule Major_Tom et al. The OOS model is correct and explains the real event. BV adds nothing - in the context of current discussions - to understanding the real event whether or not the concerns about BV are true or false. must
-- especially when the only alternative is guess-work.
There is no need for guess work to explain the real event because:
(s) The mechanism labelled ROOSD accurately describes the specific mechanism which led the progression collapse stage for both "Twins". (That includes M_T's OOS version which addressed two of the three sub-mechanisms OR my version which addresses all three mechanisms OR anyone else's versions which say the same things.)
(t) The actual energies/forces/impacts available for the progression ROOSD stage were overwhelmingly higher that the floor joist to column connections could withstand. No maths other than "ball park" guesstimates is needed to prove the point.
In my layman's reading of BV (admittedly years ago), it does appear that they think their model meets that requirement,
It is not an easy read but you could try reading again taking into account the points I have been raising.
but I'm not convinced that they take it as a "realistic" description of what actually happened.
Probably not - but that is where they add to the confusions.
Thanks again for the comments.