Fellas... I cited one of the best structural engineers in the entire world, Guy Nordenson... who believes there may have been design flaws in fire protection and structure...
TAKE IT UP WITH HIM...
I happen to agree.
Sander he is not posting here. You are.
-- and you persist in fogging the two completely different thresholds for "design flaw" despite me and others having clarified the distinction many times.
DGM and I and couple of others are friendly guys who will try to help you improve understanding. But several others are only interested in ridiculing what you say. I and those of similar mindset will persist in separating the true validly parts of your claims which can be supported by reasoned argument from the vague excursions into irrelevant or ungrounded speculation. But it becomes tedious repeating the separation and clarification when you persist in ignoring the distinction.
If you persist in posting comments which in effect say "Kick Me!" many members will oblige even tho' they themselves rarely add anything to legitimate debate.
The designs of ALL three towers were more than adequate for design envelope parameters.
All three buildings ultimately collapsed when pushed way beyond design envelope.
Any building when pushed to the ultimate will fail;
It will fail at the weakest point revealed by the gross overloading;
That "weakest point" is NOT a "design flaw" despite your persistent claims otherwise;
The design code requirements for the buildings did not specify how ultimate failure should be provided for at the time. And still don't AFAIK under US codes;
Which is another reason why - given no such provision - whatever the mechanism of ultimate failure it is NOT a design flaw.
It is feasible to make such provisions but not feasible to prevent failure under ultimate overloading;
Relevant to the Twin Towers is is a simple principle that multi cell (or multi-"tube") designs probably have - tend to have - greater redundancy to defend against total failure than single tube designs. That is not - cannot be - a global guarantee - it is specific to the design and the specific situation. BUT - contrast the twin towers which are essentially prone to "single point" failure but only under gross overload way beyond reasonable design.
Then your speculations about WTC7 initiation have no effect on any reasoned conclusion that I can identify and you have not provided one; PLUS
Nordenson and (I think without checking) Cantor were hired to provide legal opinions serving one side of litigation. Legal Ethics in such a situation requires that a LAWYER presents his clients point of view with full force independent of balance OR of his own opinion. My own understanding of AU and UK engineering ethics suggests that I would not be ethically free to present such a one sided view without acknowledging the weight of contrary professional opinion. I am not familiar with the situation of engineering professional ethics in the US scene.
BUT neither of them is posting here. You are. So please stop posting one side of any argument when you have been made aware of the balanced overall situation.