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'What about building 7'?

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You must not think very much of your audience if you think you are not completely transparent. You made a desperate attempt to rehash the old NIST hypothesis and you even begged pardon for doing so "for the umpteenth time":

LOL, the only "audience" I'm concerned with are those with sufficient reading comprehension to understand what I'm saying and sufficient intellectual honesty to respond without deliberately distorting it. You can have the rest, and you're welcome, but I'll take the points that you completely ignore as conceded.
 
...
There are several people here on both sides who know way more than I do about the technical side of this subject: ... Oystein, ...
*caugh* uhem urrr no... I don't think I know more than you, overall ;)

Bottom line, it seems to me that Oystein and others are arguing that the NIST collapse initiation model is by necessity simplified, assuming for example that certain parts of the building were unmoving during the fire. ...

This, but recently, the more important point, I think, das been that NIST's description of the model and its results is abbreviated - the FEA put out tons of numbers that mean many many things, many of which are "significant" (depending on your objectives, of course), but they explicitly state only a few of those facts, and omit a whole lot - just to make the report readable. For example, we know, qualitatively, that column 79 was pushed east by the 76-79 girder on floor 13 between 3.5 and 4 hours, but they don't tell us how far and exactly when (this surely happened gradually as the girder heated up, with probably a few sudden jumps as the corresponding girders on the floors below buckled in tension). Ziggi is trying to get mileage out of this lack of precise information, speculating that perhaps that push came too early (or too late?), or was too little, to aid the walk-off of the 44-79 girder. pgimeno points out that we can't know either way unless we ask NIST to release these numbers. What we DO know is that NIST reports the significant result one level of comprehensiveness up: The criterion for walk-off - 6.25" travel of girder end relative to its seat - was met by 4 hours. Ziggi argues that since they don't provide more detail, they could have made it up (which, of course, is possible), and that, since this is possible and agrees with Truther prejudice, it is also the most probable.


ETA: Let me rephrase for clarity: Ziggi's and gerrycan's argument seems to be that details (factors, numbers...) that NIST does't mention explicitly cannot play a role in anything. E.g.: Since NIST does not say explicitly that the col 79 displacement was a factor that enabled the walk-off, it therefore was wasn't a factor.
 
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*caugh* uhem urrr no... I don't think I know more than you, overall ;)
I agree. I applaud Chris Mohr for his seemingly tirelessness in keeping pace with the discussions. As a result he has an almost encyclopedic knowledge of what has transpired over the years. He makes no claim to technical knowledge just knowledge of what's been claimed in a general sense.

.... but recently, the more important point, I think, das been that NIST's description of the model and its results is abbreviated - the FEA put out tons of numbers that mean many many things, many of which are "significant" (depending on your objectives, of course), but they explicitly state only a few of those facts, and omit a whole lot - just to make the report readable. For example, we know, qualitatively, that column 79 was pushed east by the 76-79 girder on floor 13 between 3.5 and 4 hours, but they don't tell us how far and exactly when (this surely happened gradually as the girder heated up, with probably a few sudden jumps as the corresponding girders on the floors below buckled in tension). Ziggi is trying to get mileage out of this lack of precise information, speculating that perhaps that push came too early (or too late?), or was too little, to aid the walk-off of the 44-79 girder. pgimeno points out that we can't know either way unless we ask NIST to release these numbers. What we DO know is that NIST reports the significant result one level of comprehensiveness up: The criterion for walk-off - 6.25" travel of girder end relative to its seat - was met by 4 hours. Ziggi argues that since they don't provide more detail, they could have made it up (which, of course, is possible), and that, since this is possible and agrees with Truther prejudice, it is also the most probable.


ETA: Let me rephrase for clarity: Ziggi's and gerrycan's argument seems to be that details (factors, numbers...) that NIST does't mention explicitly cannot play a role in anything. E.g.: Since NIST does not say explicitly that the col 79 displacement was a factor that enabled the walk-off, it therefore was wasn't a factor.

That is as good a summary of the discussion of late. I suppose the release of all the output data through the entire computer run might silence the critics. Probably not though. They would merely move the goalposts.

Fact is that NIST is reporting on the computer results and if anyone wishes to dispute those results the best way to do so is to run your own, similarly, or demonstrably better, researched and detailed FEAs.


......and we wait.
 
I think Chris was merely summarizing the position of both sides, not picking one.

I know, if you cut back the BS over the last 20 odd pages, it's just full of repetition from Gerry & co, you will find there is no substance to their claims.

Until they can provide their evidence all they can do is bog down the discussion with BS and distraction which amounts to nothing, hence not being able to go to the NIST.

If I tell you I am growing fairies down in my bottom field you are going to have a hell of a job proving me wrong in this forum. And that's all it amounts to.
 

The technical aspects of this long discussion are over my head, but when I put aside the insults, here is what I think I get from it. I knew that Ziggi's initial question about NIST's theory was going to end with Ziggi showing that the walkoff couldn't have resulted in global collapse in the way NIST said because they showed no evidence (and they have not been able to show enough expansion in their own models). Otherwise, he would not have asked.
In NISTs theory, if there's no walk off there's no collapse. They've failed to show a valid initiating event. Any discussion on NISTs analysis of the collapse will of course gravitate toward whether their theory is possible.
There are several people here on both sides who know way more than I do about the technical side of this subject: MM, Ziggi, Tony, gerrycan, JSanderO, pgimeno, Oystein, to name a few. Our opponents have certainly put a lot of time and energy into researching the NIST Report, and I credit them for finding issues I would never have had the technical skills to notice.
I think that you do clearly have enough of a technical awareness to understand the issues though, as they are presented. It's quite clear that what NIST are claiming could not have happened the way that they suppose, and whilst I welcome the scrutiny of the claims being made by myself and others there does come a time when the issues with the specifics of NIST's claimed initiating event mount up to the point that their theory collapses.

Bottom line, it seems to me that Oystein and others are arguing that the NIST collapse initiation model is by necessity simplified, assuming for example that certain parts of the building were unmoving during the fire.
That would be fine if those simplifications were taken into account especially around the initiating event, but they're not. How they managed to get 5.5" displacement to the west in the beam (k3004) is a mystery in itself, given that they must have looked at the C38 connection at the other end of it and known there was rougly an inch of expansion there. That means that in essence they were originally claiming 6.5" of expansion before they fessed up to getting what might be the 2 most important numbers in the whole analysis the wrong way round in their draft and final reports.
CTBUH also points out that the walkoff could be better explained by some combination of thermal expansion followed by thermal contraction (which is not in the NIST model) and other factors they noted which NIST did not account for in their model. Being one inch off in NIST's estimates can be accounted for by the chaos of an unfought fire and factors that were not fed into the model.
Yes, the CTBUH blame the floor system failures.
This is not about NIST or anyone being 1" out. It's more like them being out by 4 or 5 inches, and that is no triviality especially when every issue that has arisen from research of their analysis makes their supposed initiating event less plausible.
In the words of Norman Mineta, "as you see one thing happen, that's an accident. When you see two of the same thing occur, it's a pattern. But when you see three of the same thing occur, it's a program."
JSanderO seems to go a step further and suggest some other collapse mechanism may be at play.
Indeed he does.
Tony jumps all the way to concluding that we need a new investigation
We do. The old one's not got a possible initiating event in it.
because the NIST Report is fatally flawed.
It is.
So there are two questions: is Tony right that NIST put out a deeply inaccurate report and we need to start over again? Again, I can't go into the technical issues deeply, I can only review the conclusions of people with more technical knowledge. I do know that Purdue, Hawaii, CTBUH and countless other university students have indeed studied the NIST Report. It's a standard study tool in technical classes all over the world. Rebellious young bucks everywhere pore over it (it's a cool way to teach students about the principles of physics, architecture, engineering, etc) and I'm sure many of them would love to find a way to find fault with their elders. Outside of 9/11 Truth, I have not heard any MAJOR critiques, just the pointing out of relatively minor differences.
Anybody with a major critique of the NIST report into WTC7 would immediately be considered inside of 911 truth.
From what I can see, people here are joined by 99% of the technical world in agreeing with the major points of the NIST Report.
It's fallacy to claim a huge % of those in the technical world agree with you by way of their acquiescence.
So the second question is, do Tony, gerrycan, MM, Ziggi and others see fatal flaws where the rest of the world sees simplified models and minor inaccuracies?
If a hypothesis is impossible it should be discarded. You are trying to minimise the issue with the term "minor inaccuracies", when in fact the truth is that the analysis is inaccurate as you stated.
My long arguments with Chris Sarns about the fires in Building 7 came down to this question of perspective as well. The videos of Building 7 burning did not match the NIST model for which floors were burning when. Sarns said, clearly this is fraud. It seems to me that the extraordinary analysis with a fine-toothed comb of the NIST Report could turn up a fatal flaw, but I am not convinced that this is what Tony et al have unearthed.
Nobody here is disagreeing what the temperatures were in the model though. The scrutiny of NIST's analysis has turned up a fatal flaw with the initiating event. It can't happen the way that they are claiming.
I realize I have very little to add to the technical side of this discussion.
Not at all, jump right in. After all, it didn't stop the others of your ilk. :)
I wonder if my little "perspective" summary seems reasonably accurate.
It seems reasonably put.
 
I know, if you cut back the BS over the last 20 odd pages, it's just full of repetition from Gerry & co, you will find there is no substance to their claims.

Until they can provide their evidence all they can do is bog down the discussion with BS and distraction which amounts to nothing, hence not being able to go to the NIST.

If I tell you I am growing fairies down in my bottom field you are going to have a hell of a job proving me wrong in this forum. And that's all it amounts to.

Yes , its an oddity of 911T of various stripes, that they seem long on internet discussion and very short on actual research. It is especially odd in that one criticism was that NIST took too long to finish the WTC7 report, when no truth group has bothered to do anything that can stand against the NIST reports, nothing in the way of a study to supply a fashion of CD for any structure, nor a good reason why slamming aircraft into buildings was not enough.
 
Gerry:

Any thoughts on which code recommendations your were referring to earlier? You seem to have skipped over this. Obviously you disagree with Dick Gage in this regard

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=10516732#post10516732

You keep coming back to this. What I said was that recommendations that intended to address a wrongly supposed initiating event would not address the true initiating event and so were unlikely to prevent a recurrence of the same result from the same conditions. I am comfortable with that.
 
In NISTs theory, if there's no walk off there's no collapse.

Wow you cannot get past your first sentence without being completely wrong.

They've failed to show a valid initiating event.
Nor the second.

Any discussion on NISTs analysis of the collapse will of course gravitate toward whether their theory is possible.
Nor the third.

I think that you do clearly have enough of a technical awareness to understand the issues though, as they are presented. It's quite clear that what NIST are claiming could not have happened the way that they suppose, and whilst I welcome the scrutiny of the claims being made by myself and others there does come a time when the issues with the specifics of NIST's claimed initiating event mount up to the point that their theory collapses.
The only claims you have made are NIST=wrong.......you have no engineering proof, just simplistic paper napkin calculations which are meaningless. You cannot even garner the support of 1/2 of 1% of the relevant professionals in the country, thus your claims have no merit.


That would be fine if those simplifications were taken into account especially around the initiating event, but they're not.
Maybe when you can convince a reasonable percentage of the relevant professionals that your claim has merit, someone will listen.......as of now, all you attract are the uneducated and the kook fringe.


How they managed to get 5.5" displacement to the west in the beam (k3004) is a mystery in itself,
Only to the uneducated and cultist believers.

given that they must have looked at the C38 connection at the other end of it and known there was rougly an inch of expansion there. That means that in essence they were originally claiming 6.5" of expansion before they fessed up to getting what might be the 2 most important numbers in the whole analysis the wrong way round in their draft and final reports.
The 99.5+ % of the relevant professional find your claim baseless

Yes, the CTBUH blame the floor system failures.
This is not about NIST or anyone being 1" out. It's more like them being out by 4 or 5 inches, and that is no triviality especially when every issue that has arisen from research of their analysis makes their supposed initiating event less plausible.
And more baseless claims from the uneducated. :rolleyes:

In the words of Norman Mineta, "as you see one thing happen, that's an accident. When you see two of the same thing occur, it's a pattern. But when you see three of the same thing occur, it's a program."

Which explains troofers inability to do anything except raise money for dicky gage's vacations.


It's fallacy to claim a huge % of those in the technical world agree with you by way of their acquiescence.

If a hypothesis is impossible it should be discarded..

Then you are discarding the inside jobby jobby / CD claim then?
That would be a start.
 
You keep coming back to this. What I said was that recommendations that intended to address a wrongly supposed initiating event would not address the true initiating event and so were unlikely to prevent a recurrence of the same result from the same conditions. I am comfortable with that.

And you keep coming back to this
I believe it is now time to change the game plan and to use the numbers that these pertinent and relevant issues have helped gain for our cause. And I am convinced that the way to do this is to ask people to take that first step of entertaining the possibility that the WTC7 report is provably false, and allow them to draw their own conclusions rather than ask them to step straight to the finish line of "911 was an inside job

You cannot get anywhere without "proving the NIST report false" You have failed to do that, and continue to fail to do that. All the bluster, all the hand waving, all the lies, has not changed that one bit. All you have done is continued your hamster wheel act. :rolleyes:
 
In NISTs theory, if there's no walk off there's no collapse. They've failed to show a valid initiating event. Any discussion on NISTs analysis of the collapse will of course gravitate toward whether their theory is possible.
NO!
NIST determined that collapse followed the loss of column 79. It further determined that heat could not sufficiently directly affect col 79 to the point if failure. Floor failure however could in turn fail col79. The major fires around col 79 were around floors 11-13. The computer programs point to the major contributor to floor failures as a loss of the major girder between col 79 and 44. NIST acknowledges the uncertainty in this by labeling the girder walk off as a most probable scenario.
However, the fact of col 79 loss is in little dispute and NIST further noted that a loss of column 79 leads to global collapse regardless of whatever causes that loss. You are tilting at a straw man ( to mix a metaphor) Something caused a loss of column 79 and the sole available driver of such a loss is the fires, just the fires. Let me reiterate, that the only probable or driving mechanism for initiation of the progression to global collapse are the fires. On that every single professional organization sees NO dispute.




That would be fine if those simplifications were taken into account especially around the initiating event, but they're not. How they managed to get 5.5" displacement to the west in the beam (k3004) is a mystery in itself, given that they must have looked at the C38 connection at the other end of it and known there was rougly an inch of expansion there. That means that in essence they were originally claiming 6.5" of expansion before they fessed up to getting what might be the 2 most important numbers in the whole analysis the wrong way round in their draft and final reports.
It results from within the context of the FEAs that were run. To dispute a complex set of calculations that an FEA is capable of you need to show equal or better treatment. When will the world see that cone about?

Yes, the CTBUH blame the floor system failures.
Imagine that! Note also that they unambiguously dispute any truther scenario.

The old one's not got a possible initiating event in it.
do you?

Anybody with a major critique of the NIST report into WTC7 would immediately be considered inside of 911 truth.
The CTBUH certainly isn't. Neither was Quintere. Seems your premise fails.
What marks one as 911 truth would be ridiculous notions of thermite, explosives, inside job, and a dizzy collection of even more outlandish scenarios.

It's fallacy to claim a huge % of those in the technical world agree with you by way of their acquiescence.

The opposite is very very clearly not the case either.

Nobody here is disagreeing what the temperatures were in the model though.
??? You must be referring only to this particular thread, and only the most recent portion of it.
 
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You keep coming back to this. What I said was that recommendations that intended to address a wrongly supposed initiating event would not address the true initiating event and so were unlikely to prevent a recurrence of the same result from the same conditions. I am comfortable with that.

Any thoughts on what the "true initiating event" was and what recommendations would address it?
 
You keep coming back to this. What I said was that recommendations that intended to address a wrongly supposed initiating event would not address the true initiating event and so were unlikely to prevent a recurrence of the same result from the same conditions. I am comfortable with that.
Do you think there is such thing as the "same conditions" presented on 9/11 and code changes should be made to prevent it? The NIST did a pretty good job of covering the bases that could lead to the conditions that could compromise just about any steel building.

For instance. If the sprinkler systems were still functioning, The building likely would have survived. The NIST made recommendations to help insure they do. They also made recommendations to help protect the steel in the event the sprinklers were to fail.

Unless you can show the cause of the collapse was not due to fire, your statement has no real value. No one in the "truther" camp has even come close.
 
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Any thoughts on what the "true initiating event" was and what recommendations would address it?
Technically the true initiating events happened at 9:59 and 10:28 AM. This is just another case were gerrycan and co. want to narrow the scope. Unless he's suggesting we mandate all building are able to cope with what happened that day (a recommendation that could never pass) he has to admit, the NIST covered the bases fairly well.
 
And you keep coming back to this
I believe it is now time to change the game plan and to use the numbers that these pertinent and relevant issues have helped gain for our cause. And I am convinced that the way to do this is to ask people to take that first step of entertaining the possibility that the WTC7 report is provably false, and allow them to draw their own conclusions rather than ask them to step straight to the finish line of "911 was an inside job

You cannot get anywhere without "proving the NIST report false" You have failed to do that, and continue to fail to do that. All the bluster, all the hand waving, all the lies, has not changed that one bit. All you have done is continued your hamster wheel act. :rolleyes:

I think that this is a far better approach and it is to some extent keeping this exchange fuccused on the technical. I can understand why that has irked you.
And who you callin a liar?
It's rude and very ironic.
 
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