Indeed.
As I posted a week or two ago, the WBB has been lab tested against professional force plates costing upwards of $18000 with very positive results...
A comparison with Kistler force plate 9287CA...
[qimg]http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/9/2/208143945.jpg[/qimg]
Proves the point that anything purchased by millions of households will make it cheaper per unit than if only a few labs purchase it.How do I get millions of households to purchase one of these
http://harrisbroadcast.com/product...hers/SmallRouting/PanaceaCleanQuietSwitch.asp to bring the price down from $8K?
Yes. Experiment. Not WTC model. Getting Tony to understand the difference should be a laugh.
Once the setup is complete, I'm sure a range of tests can be performed.
Apparently the same problem will exist with MirgaeMemories.
Indeed the problem with TS and MM seems to be the unqualified ( as in no qualifiers used in the statement) that loose material results in less force than a solid block.
As stated above, I have no problem with that as a statement of basic physics. Transfer of momentum over a longer time period, will result in a lower max force. The issue is whether or not this would result in a difference in collapsing the floors of the WTC.
To use an analogy in my world one can say that an increase in input voltage will cause protection circuits to take effect (ie, a fuse will blow). Yes, this is true BUT in the real world the input voltage must rise enough to cause an increase in current above the rated value of the fuse/protection circuit and remain there long enough for the fuse or protection circuit to blow/detect the raised value. For many circuits, a transient of a few nanoseconds will not do anything whereas a few tens of milliseconds will. The qualifier is the quantification of the transient and the specs of the device.
However we see absolutely no backing experimentation or research done by TS or AE911T to quantify this in regards to the effects of all the variables that would affect the max force delivered to the floor as a whole.
It is the 'not enough heat from the 7WTC fires to buckle a girder' argument. For years AE911T has called upon NIST to relinquish their input data set for 7WTC so that they (AE911T) can 'verify' the results. Using NIST data would do what? It would allow AE911T to plug this data into the exact same fire sim program and see if running it gives the results NIST published.
THAT'S research? NO, that's an assumption of malfeasance. What AE911T has had a decade to do is to research and document what they feel should be the input data set, then run a the same fire sim program NIST used and perhaps separate program as well and compare results.
THEN they can argue that NIST 'should have' done this or that.
It all simply illustrates the very lazy attitude that AE911T has wrt to actually
doing anything.
IMHO of course.