CHF
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2006
- Messages
- 3,871
Additionally, there wasn't a lot of fire above the 99th floor.
Your point?
Additionally, there wasn't a lot of fire above the 99th floor.
Your point?
I think you should realize the context I was using the term disintegrate in. How about fell apart? Does that work better for you?
The point is that the lower stories of the upper block of WTC 1 were the first to collapse and they had no aircraft damage and there was no jolt. How could that happen naturally?
Your collapsable telescope is not akin to the towers construction unless your telescope had a huge structure (the core) in the middle, which collapsed also. The perimeter did not collapse around the core, they both collapsed at the same time.
Additionally, there wasn't a lot of fire above the 99th floor. Think about that.
The flat velocity spot at t = 1.6 to 1.8 seconds into the collapse is not a deceleration and would not produce an amplified load. It just means the resistance was equal to the load for a short time and there was no acceleration for that short period.
I think you have to admit that it is hard to imagine how floors 96 and 97 could just move out of the way to allow 98 to fall onto 95 in your postulated scenario here. There is really no chance of a full three story buckle.
In reality what happened was floors 99 through 102 to 103 disintegrated first anyway. How did that happen without a jolt?
What caused floors 100 through 102 to collapse without a jolt?
Tilt. A brief period of nearly zero acceleration seems, if anything, to suggest an instantaneous resistance somewhat on the high side given the known tilt of at least 2º prior to any significant roofline drop. However, the scatter on your velocity is quite high from pixellation error alone - it would be nice, by the way, if you gave us some idea of your estimated error bars and hence the detection limit of your analysis - so I suspect the flat interval may be an error artefact anyway.
Dave
David Chandler and others have gotten pretty much the same results we did in their measurement of the fall of the upper section of WTC 1, so any claim that error is responsible for it is unjustified.
it would be nice, by the way, if you gave us some idea of your estimated error bars and hence the detection limit of your analysis - so I suspect the flat interval may be an error artefact anyway.
Floors 99 through 102 had no damage and collapsed before any of the impact damaged areas did. If they weren't damaged by impact or heat what caused them to collapse without a jolt?
You are not providing any mechanical explanation for their collapse by simply saying "the tilt caused it".
David Chandler and others have gotten pretty much the same results we did in their measurement of the fall of the upper section of WTC 1, so any claim that error is responsible for it is unjustified. It is clear that the upper section accelerated at an approximate rate of 0.7g and never lost velocity.
Again, I don't think he's neglected that point, but for the initial impact he's claiming that the lateral and rotational movement of the upper block was less than the width of a single column, so the initial strikes were column-on-column. I think he has an argument there for the core columns, but the additional buckling of the perimeter columns would complicate matters enormously.
Dave
it would be nice, by the way, if you gave us some idea of your estimated error bars and hence the detection limit of your analysis
I am an engineer but you don't need a lot of engineering to understand where Tony is either misunderstanding the mechanisms himself OR is leading a lot of people by the nose.I'm not an engineer, so when I first came across Tony's work, I imagined he might really have found issues with engineering explanations that I am improperly prepared to handle. Unfortunately, it turns out impossible to tell the difference between anything meaningful he might have to say and the other crap floating around on the net. He may have something. And he may not. Since he's also willing to act as a mouthpiece for the other swill that is so clearly ridiculous.
It's too bad, but all I can see he's good for now is attracting the attention of confirmed conspiracy theorists away from other conspiracies - like FEMA death camps or weather control - and promoting the Gage Regime through AE911.
Hey Dave,
Nah, if this is his contention, he doesn't have a point here either.
There are enormous dynamic motions in all the pieces & component, including flexing, spring back in the columns themselves when they snap, etc.
You cannot set a 50,000 ton structure on top of another one by throwing this bunch of tiny oscillating support points onto that bunch of tiny, oscillating support points. No freshman engineering student would suggest something this absurd.
More importantly, no experienced engineer is gonna start doing calculations trying to figure out what is the exact probability that they might align & hold up. An experienced engineer is just gonna laugh anyone who made such a contention out of the room. And put the idiot into that small, but real, category of "how the hell did this guy get a degree".
So, tell me, Tony. Is this really your contention? That the upper columns are going to align directly with the lower ones?
I'm tired of Tony bringing up these absurd scenarios, and then claim that, since competent engineers don't waste their time on his nonsense, he's exposed the weak underbelly of the conspiracy to ... blah, blah, blah.
Tom
Eh, IMHO there is a likelihood that outside of the conspiracy claptrap that his work may very well be competent. I don't really judge their professional competence otherwise, although I have concern over a couple extreme cases (Heiwa being one)