Grizzly Bear
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- Joined
- May 30, 2008
- Messages
- 7,963
Do you mind me asking once more - in the interest of cutting some of the noise factor - where your critique leads? I may doubt your argument at this level of detail but if it leads to a valid criticism of code changes that resulted from NISTs' findings then that seems like a reasonable "next step".No, the fact that NIST were asked to look for any additional elements on the girder leaves them no excuse for not seeing the plates that were there on the drawings.
Maybe you could explain COMBIN37 to LSSBB?
I know you're absolutely flooded with responses to your remarks, but your colleagues answer to me a couple days ago was unfortunately far from complete.
I keep asking because while "CD" isn't a viable conclusion, it doesn't mean NIST's findings are absolute either. The criticisms from the CBUTH are proof of this.
Now again... I'm willing to open up to the possibility that the NIST focused too much on one mechanism. You do not need to argue with me at that level of detail; so what then? In your line of concluding, is this a "the building should not have collapsed at all" sort of thing, or is this a "NIST focused too much on the wrong collapse initiation mecanism and made the wrong code recommendations" sort of thing?
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