Robrob
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2011
- Messages
- 5,497
Oh, so there is more data about what happened inside WTC7?
Ohhh....dooo tell!
LOL!
![]()
Your point?
Oh, so there is more data about what happened inside WTC7?
Ohhh....dooo tell!
LOL!
![]()
Sure once column 79 buckled (not explained) 40 stories drop like a lead sinker... and then the TTF scenario kicks in. Check Got it.
Thanks for the ref. I see it all clear as day!
Less for WTC7 than for the "Twins". Direct evidence of internal collapse - two penthouses fell bodily into the core area.Oh, so there is more data about what happened inside WTC7?
Ohhh....dooo tell!
LOL!
![]()
I find that you're asking for a level of detail that's simply not feasible. The progression beyond the "single column failure" deals more with the long spans and load redistribution that have to follow when the structure gave out and the design vulnerabilities that were part of the building.
"Column 79" failed and it initiated a progressive collapse. We know based on analyzing the modeling that's where it started. A "best estimate" of the mechanisms that caused that particular column at that particular area was narrowed down based on the visual and model documentation, so beyond what started the collapse initiation we already have a good view on how the rest of the building came down.
But it's near impossible to nitpick the level of detail you're demanding to know precisely with 100% certainty for reasons that OZ already covered earlier.
You have your skepticism, it doesn't bother me, but I'm rather skeptical that the question you're trying to raise is answerable. You're literally asking to have answered a level of detail that requires full, first hand visuals of the initiating failure to even begin dealing with as far as I can tell.
I think modelling it is an exercise of diminishing returns. This was apparent in their model animations of the collapse since the failure paths constantly increase as you proceed beyond the initial failure. So personally... no...My beef is that it's a leap with way too many huge assumptions to get from girders walking and elongated steed to total collapse or even failure of 8 story heights of column 79. It may well be possible but it has been articulated. Of course it will be a "model" because there is no data... but let's see more specificity... no?
It your opinion....
My beef is that it's a leap with way too many huge assumptions to get from girders walking and elongated steed to total collapse or even failure of 8 story heights of column 79. It may well be possible but it has been articulated. Of course it will be a "model" because there is no data... but let's see more specificity... no?
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?
Never asked for precise details... just a reasonable, understandable sequence. Not how detailed NIST was about the girder walk off. Then they stopped.
My beef is that it's a leap with way too many huge assumptions to get from girders walking and elongated steed to total collapse or even failure of 8 story heights of column 79. It may well be possible but it has been articulated. Of course it will be a "model" because there is no data... but let's see more specificity... no?
Aren't these questions an exercise in futility? During the design/analysis phases of building project, how can an engineer be expected to figure out all permutations of possible failure scenarios in order to see if said structure will completely (or partially collapse) collapse?
So the engineer is supposed to run analysis on the following during the design/calculation phases:
1st floor, column 1, complete failure... Does structure remain standing?
1st floor, column 2, complete failure... Does structure remain standing?
...etc. for all columns, all floors...
1st floor, columns 1 and 2 failure... Does structure remain standing?
...etc.
1st floor, column 1 (80% weakening), column 4 (total failure)... Does structure remain standing?
Again, how many permutations of combined component weakening and failure are possible in a structure? This would take forever.
Now in the case of WTC7, we have SOME visual evidence of what happened, but can never know exactly what happened because you would need to run through every single permutation and find one that matches the exact collapse seen in the videos. You'd also need to make sure the resultant debris pile ended up with components landing in the same positions/locations.
Thanks, Gamalon. The sentence I highlighted is one of the key points NIST critics fail to understand.
Not entirely. Whilst Sander's OP questions were poorly structured I have answered them several times through this thread. I have answered those that can be answered and showed what is wrong with those which cannot be answered in their present form.Aren't these questions an exercise in futility?...
Now let me introduce a "red herring" for those who have done the homework and read what NIST actually said:
The fourth simulation that NIST did using LS-DYNA was precisely the one central to Sanders questions. Viz - "Would WTC7 collapse if Col 79 failed?"
Yes - remove Col 79 and, according to NIST, WTC7 would collapse.
So it's interesting that no-one has commented on that bit of NIST...
...but NIST don't attempt to explain how Col79 could fail without the surrounding context of fires and other failures.
So I'll leave that little bit of a red herring there.![]()
Ok - would you accept "pink sardine"?Red herring indeed.
NIST wanted to understand the importance of a single point of failure and ran the sim with a pristine WTC 7 and col 79 failed. This indicates that it was quite possible that in a previously damaged WTC 7 that failure of this column would lead to global collapse.
The simple removal of col 79 sim in an otherwise undamaged building needed no context or proximate cause as it was not a forensic investigation of such a condition. It was a best case (for the building's condition), a limiting case.

True. And in the case of Twin Towers we already have two far better examples than any physical model - unless you have psikological barriers to accepting reality.As an aside it demonstrates one value of computer modeling versus physical modelling. Try running multiple tests like this in a physical model,,,, got a budget?
Yes - that much has never been in doubt AFAICSWhat the NIST does say is that the TOTAL failure of the building was ALSO related to the column lines of 79, 80 and 81 and the floors framed into them all dropping (40 stories)...
Which in the NIST scenario is consequential to Col 79 and in your scenario AFAICS it is causal. And neither - whether causal or consequential - changes the fact that EPH fell. Both are plausible and both complement the known facts of (EPH fell THEREFORE Coll 79 and related structures supporting EPH must have failed). (Forgive the algebraic notation.)... and destroying the transfer trusses... and the E-W girder running north of the core and the trusses INSIDE the core and TT3 and on.
you are reading more into that than NIST claims. The supportable part of the explanation is that "total collapse destroyed the transfer structures" The "ONLY possible" causal relationship is not provable on the available evidence nor IMO implied by NIST.So in 7wtc the total collapse was apparently ONLY possible because the collapse of several columns (according the the NIST sequence) destroyed the transfer structures.
Can't say - the switch from "WTC7" to "an entire building" not sufficiently defined.This is key and what makes 7wtc unique and probably why... I would guess, a single column failure or two would not take down an entire building.
...which I have agreed from the first time you said it is a plausible explanation as a contributory factor.Of course... as I have suggested it makes perfect sense if the transfer structures failed BEFORE the columns above... but I don't have any data to support this...
...my position unchanged - both yours and NIST's explanations are plausible with TT failure and/or Girder walkoff as part of the mechanism. And neither "provable" IMO. The aspect which is "provable" is that sufficient of the bracing and/or supports for Col79 MUST have failed. That much proven by my claims in this and several previous posts. But we don't know which ones failed or what sequence other than MUST have been "before Col 79 failure".much the way NIST had no real data to support their scenario...
Whether NIST "cheated" or not is irrelevant - the braces and/or supports MUST have failed. If NIST said that braces/supports did not fail NIST would obviously be wrong - unless the weight of EPH tripled/quadrupled by magic to grossly overload 79. AFAIK no one is claiming magic increase in EPH weight so it must have failed from some form of buckling/bending/misalignment/corkscrewing. (I am disregarding termite gobbling, WoodsDustification and Mini-Nukes). (and CDIt appears to me that they made up the heat inputs to drive the bracing destruction, perhaps additional floor collapses leaving the column unbraced and it buckled. I can stipulate to that scenario, but there's been little to no meat on the bones so to speak.
It appears to me that they made up the heat inputs to drive the bracing destruction, perhaps additional floor collapses leaving the column unbraced and it buckled. I can stipulate to that scenario, but there's been little to no meat on the bones so to speak.
- unless you have psikological barriers to accepting reality.
Oh snap!![]()

I don't suppose you would believe "spelling error"
...or "unintended"...
![]()
Not entirely. Whilst Sander's OP questions were poorly structured I have answered them several times through this thread. I have answered those that can be answered and showed what is wrong with those which cannot be answered in their present form.
One issue which is problematic for Sanders questions is that he presumes that failure of a single structural element can lead to global collapse. You assume the same scenario in your post.