Animal
Master Poster
We know by using a very basic understanding of physics.
Physics? Troofers don't need no stinkin physics.
We know by using a very basic understanding of physics.
I'll stick with two points I made in my previous post:Without including the stiffener in its model, how do we know it would not have prevented the walkoff?
The first of those claims is false. The second claim is wrong. If it is true that their hand picked small group of engineers was unanimous - they were unanimously wrong.With the inclusion of these critical features, NIST’s probable collapse sequence must be ruled out unambiguously. It is the unanimous opinion of the structural engineers who have carefully studied this matter that an independent engineering enquiry would swiftly reach the same conclusion...
I'll stick with two points I made in my previous post:
1) We cannot know with any certainty either way;
We know by using a very basic understanding of physics.
Good answer. After all, there might be one Tom, Dick, and/or Mary that might see that their entire model is (de)bunk.
Newton's Bit:
These two statements appear to be in conflict.
The appearance of a conflict can be used to dismiss the whole argument.What's your point?
The appearance of a conflict can be used to dismiss the whole argument.
OP:
Total Building Collapse from a Single Column Failure
NIST makes the case that the failure of column 79 on floor 13 apparently caused by a girder walking off its beam seat at column 79 led pretty quickly to the collapse of the entire building leaving nothing standing at all.
I wonder... how universal this actually is?
Would column 79 failing at floor 29 have caused the global collapse?
Would any other single column failing on any floor lead to global collapse?
Could any single column failing on any other floor NOT lead to global collapse? (I don't suspect the failure of a column at the roof level would.) If so why or why not?
Is this single column failure applicable to any multi story high rise? Would it have to be steel framed? Would it have to be a minimum building height? Would there have to be a minimum number of floors above the failed column?
If the single column failure global collapse outcome is not more or less universally applicable what was it about 7 WTC's design and column failure at floor 13 that allowed for a single column failure to lead to global collapse?
Should NIST have discussed this or not?
Why dont you read the thread David? Lots of answers or partial answers.Seems to me to all be good points and questions.
Has anyone given you any responses?
That is a full grade closer to coming to grips with likely reality than all the arguments which presume pristine conditions.IMHO...this critical connection ripped itself apart. The bottom two 7/8" diameter bolts ripped thru a large piece of the bottom girder flange and probably a large part of the web too. This local failure probably released 40-80 tons of force, built up by the temperature gradient. At this point there was no remaining girder support left to bear on the column support plate.

Nah. Too much misuse of FEA by both sides on this forum.I wish NIST had done a more detailed non-linear finite element analysis of this critical connection and proposed failure.
So... can a single column failure lead to a collapse of an entire 47 story building?
Please describe how that happens.
So... can a single column failure lead to a collapse of an entire 47 story building?
Please describe how that happens.

So... can a single column failure lead to a collapse of an entire 47 story building?
Please describe how that happens.
Well? If you play the game of JENGA, and you pull out just one wrong wooden piece...down she comes!![]()
Sander that question is too vaguely defined to be answerable as you have been told several times.So... can a single column failure lead to a collapse of an entire 47 story building?
Please describe how that happens.
Ooops - I wasn't explicit enough in the previous.Redundancy would almost certainly redistribute loads succesfully from a single column "failure" in most buildings.1) If you mean that something causes a column to fail without any context of other trauma AND that the failure of ONLY that single column causes global collapse THEN it is both highly unlikely AND situation specific.
Sander that question is too vaguely defined to be answerable as you have been told several times.
The ambiguity has two main alternatives:
1) If you mean that something causes a column to fail without any context of other trauma THEN it is both highly unlikely AND situation specific.
2) If you mean failure of a single column in the full context of other trauma then you need to define both the context and what you mean by "lead"
For example there is zero doubt that Column 79 failed in the WTC7 collapse. It is near certain that Col 79 failed in Euler buckling due to removal of bracing over several storeys. In that setting Col 79 could be described as a key feature of the collapse. Using "leading" is misleading - it neither "leads" in the sense of "happening before" - "leading the way" NOR "leads" in the sense of being the single causal event.
That is not true Sander - you didn't specify one story - this was the question you asked:Ozzie,
You accepting the cause of the failure being floor collapse and then lengthening of the unbraced length.
That wasn't the question. I did not suggest a column of multiple stories which had lost its lateral bracing. I asked if a single column failure (one story) could lead to a total building collapse?
So... can a single column failure lead to a collapse of an entire 47 story building?
