I believe I even heard that someone said WTC 7 was observed to be swaying in the breeze it was so damaged by the fires in it. Was it you? I can imagine some here saying that is proof it fell by fire.
Unfortunately, there is no video of this, so NIST couldn't use that as proof in their report. Thus they will still have to come up with something feasible since the discovery that they omitted structural features made their first try fail.
Unfortunately, there is no video of this, so NIST couldn't use that as proof in their report. Thus they will still have to come up with something feasible since the discovery that they omitted structural features made their first try fail.
Analysis shows the stiffeners would prevent flange failure when the girder's web is past the seat. That is irrefutable and it is not surprising that those who don't want to accept the reality that the NIST WTC 7 report is in error here just want to talk around it rather than addressing the issue.
The flange didn't fail. The girder rolled off.
This is why I wanted gerrycan to show me where in any of the NIST's publications they stated/showed that the flange failed. He wrote the following:The flange didn't fail. The girder rolled off.
Did he come to the flange failure by running his own analysis or is he just assuming?NIST supposed that the girder failed once it had been moved to the West by the expanding beams to the East of it. Importantly, they said that the girder would fail when it had reached the halfway point ie when the web was no longer above the seatplate, but had moved far enough West to be beyond it.
The remaining bottom flange would then have the load on it and would be unable to sustain that load. To imagine that in this hypothetical from NIST that the bottom flange would not distort is to suppose that either that part of the flange is way stronger than NIST said, or that the girder failed through the seat plates.
I heard 911 truth claim there were bombs and thermite in WTC7. Oops, was not found. Zero damage from bombs, no thermite products found.I believe I even heard that someone said WTC 7 was observed to be swaying in the breeze it was so damaged by the fires in it. Was it you? I can imagine some here saying that is proof it fell by fire.
Unfortunately, there is no video of this, so NIST couldn't use that as proof in their report. Thus they will still have to come up with something feasible since the discovery that they omitted structural features made their first try fail.
Do you mean it was "rocked" off, or that it failed falling to the West beyond the seat?The flange didn't fail. The girder rolled off.
Do you mean it was "rocked" off, or that it failed falling to the West beyond the seat?
"Walk off" is the terminology used. Report p22, pdf p64.
Vertical failure of components such as support plate or flange was, iirc, not considered.
In NISTs analysis seat failure was not considered and the girder was assumed to have failed once it had reached the point where the girder web was no longer over the seat. At that point there is still half the bottom flange over the seat. The graphic represents the failure happening at that point.You're being asked to substantiate your insinuation that NIST claims the girder departed the seat by means of a deformation in the portion of the flange still resting upon the seat.
And how can the girder possibly rotate through the column sideplates, and even if it did, how far do you think that the girder would have expanded toward the column face? Surely it would be right up against it.The alternative on the table is that it rotated off the seat once the load path became suitably eccentric. The reason we ask is because the stiffener you say is missing in the FEA would not affect the latter failure mode.
I disagree. This thread is about the contents of the letter and the pdf. It is on topic.The title of the new thread suggests that discussions of the structural analysis itself, that don't treat Pepper, should go there.
I disagree. This thread is about the contents of the letter and the pdf. It is on topic.
In NISTs analysis seat failure was not considered and the girder was assumed to have failed once it had reached the point where the girder web was no longer over the seat. At that point there is still half the bottom flange over the seat. The graphic represents the failure happening at that point.
And how can the girder possibly rotate through the column sideplates, and even if it did, how far do you think that the girder would have expanded toward the column face? Surely it would be right up against it.
In NISTs analysis seat failure was not considered and the girder was assumed to have failed once it had reached the point where the girder web was no longer over the seat. At that point there is still half the bottom flange over the seat. The graphic represents the failure happening at that point.
And how can the girder possibly rotate through the column sideplates, and even if it did, how far do you think that the girder would have expanded toward the column face? Surely it would be right up against it.

In NISTs analysis seat failure was not considered and the girder was assumed to have failed once it had reached the point where the girder web was no longer over the seat.
I cannot recall whether deformation of girder elements was modeled or considered as part of the local failure hypothesis in question. A cursory re-reading of their report does not locate any such claim. I agree that "walk-off" comprises a number of related but dissimilar specific failure modes, not all of which require member deformation in order to arise. Flange deformation is certainly one of those, but I see no evidence that it is the exact failure mode NIST authors had in mind. It is possible for lateral walk-off to progress to a point where the load path generates a moment to rotate the girder about its longitudinal axis.
Column sideplates. LMAO considering who you claimed I didn't know what I was talking about. And anyone is supposed to take your claims serious? Sideplates...........![]()
It also covers the "roll off" description.
In reality there are other possible failure modes such as plastic buckling of the girder...