Would you kindly refrain from unsubstantiated structural opinions. You are an embarrassment to competent architects.
Whatever you say... I'll tell that to my clients...
Would you kindly refrain from unsubstantiated structural opinions. You are an embarrassment to competent architects.
Would you kindly refrain from unsubstantiated structural opinions. You are an embarrassment to competent architects.
Exactly why the energetics matter, the few certainties are which ever, mechanism, it has to match the energetics, and collapse times.
Would you kindly refrain from unsubstantiated structural opinions. You are an embarrassment to competent architects.
What do you mean by "the energetics"
We are beyond "statics" when talking about progressive collapseWhat do you mean by "the energetics"? Clearly, as we learned in statics class...
True, but as, in the dynamic case, forces and capacities must be treated as a function of time and/or spatial dimensions, requiring you to do integrals at some point, computing energies instead can be the smarter, easier way to go.if you exceed the capacity (ultimate yield stength) the material experiences "mechanical failure". In the case of a composite floor system or a beam the yield strengths are known. A floor slab designed to support 100psf will fail with 1000 psf superimposed on it. And this is basically what befell the slabs.
These forces were previously locked inside or by the structure?The forces to fail connections and slabs was freed from the structural matrix and destroyed the building. ...
I think what he means is that, since the aggregate energetics are easy to compute, the law of conservation of energy guarantees if some other (perhaps more detailed) collapse model does not predict the same energy and time values, it must be wrong.
Oystein;10908625 These forces were previously locked inside or by the structure? This is comic book physics.[/QUOTE said:Absolutely... it's called gravitational potential energy. When it's removed from the structural "matrix" it's potential energy becomes kinetic energy.
=
Banzant matches the energy values and collapse times, ROOSD does not.
Absolutely... it's called gravitational potential energy. When it's removed from the structural "matrix" it's potential energy becomes kinetic energy.
Could you explain this statement...
? What's your proof that the hat truss connections can support the weight of the falling core section? The connections appear to be too weak.
In the model of energetics Banzant's most resistance case is the best fit, most correct for
The collapse time.
I have no proofs of anything...
In fact I have written many times that if a column or columns are severed at around the 9x floor level (1WTC) the columns above the severed column HANG from the hat truss and the column to column connections probably will give way and those columns will drop dragging sections of floor connected to them down.
Instead of those columns supporting the hat truss they pull DOWN on it or break free of it or a both!
I have looked at that, and that may or may not be correct it depends on if the core columns alone can provide enough resistance to hold the hat truss while the core breaks free.
The inward bowing might actually be the moment before the Core breaks from the hat Truss.
Ironicly this would slow the collapse, not speed the collapses, so it might have preempted floor failure.
Bazant probably didn't know the "collapse time"... It's hardly a precisely known value... is it?
There's also some confusion about the import of the descriptor "rigid." There's "Superman could pick it up by one corner and fly away with it" rigid (which real buildings or large portions thereof never are), and there's "able to redirect loads to the remaining available load paths without major deformation" rigid (which the upper blocks were, until they weren't).
Once collapse began, the import of the "rigidity" of the remaining "upper block" was that all of the momentum of the upper block was potentially available to bear (even if only momentarily) upon whatever obstacles below offered resistance.
All you would have to do is refer to the papers you have been defending to read, or even quote, what Bazant writes on this a to find out what he meant.
It has to correspond with the energy in the seismic data, of sound transmitted in the collapses for each building and with observations.
Absolutely... it's called gravitational potential energy. When it's removed from the structural "matrix" it's potential energy becomes kinetic energy.
Could you explain this statement...