cooperman said:
"If the fireproofing was rated for 3 hours then it is quite important how long the fire burned for in a given location.
Saying "the building burned for 7 hours, which is longer that the fireproofing is rated for therefore it would collapse" is not honest. In fact, when taking into account the avoidance of the issue of how long the fire burned in a specific location, it is lying."
Dave Rogers said:
"The fireproofing rating of a component determines how long the component will take to fail in a specific controlled test, using a particular set of experimental conditions that may or may not exist in any specific fire. It's useful in comparing one type of fireproofing installation with another, but of very little value in determining the duration of a specific, arbitrary, real-world fire that is required to cause the component to fail. Therefore, a simple-minded comparison of the duration, either of the fire overall, or of the fire in any specific location, with the rating of the fireproofing is utterly worthless in predicting component failure."
It is absolutely incredible that you would utter such bs.
Do you actually read what you write man?
Why bother doing the tests if the results have no validity in rating real world fire-proofing materials?
Dave Rogers said:
"This is not, of course, what NIST did. What they did was to model the progress of the fires, determine the temperature distribution this induced as a function of time throughout the structure, determine from this the differential expansion of different parts of the structure, and determine what structural failures resulted. Their findings were that the structural failures were sufficient to cause global collapse. The structure defined for their models included fireproofing of the composition and dimensions of that of the actual building. Therefore, comparing fireproofing ratings with durations is utterly irrelevant to any assessment of the NIST investigation."
The NIST did not properly test and prove their theory using experimental fires.
They were quite content to feed assumed data to a computer model. A model which the NIST pioneered [drum roll] during their WTC Twin Towers investigation.
One of the biggest problems with their computer model, was that its success demanded a certain level of fuel loading in order to satisfy the NIST WTC7 collapse theory.
In Dr. Greening's paper, he questioned the exaggerated fuel availability estimates that the NIST was using as computer data.
The critical point in the NIST collapse theory was the failure of column 79 on the 13th floor. That failure was dependent on the heat subjected to the 13th floor from the fires on floor 12 below.
The NIST fire simulations indicate that floor 12 and floor 13 of WTC7 suffered from the greatest amount of heat energy.
Using NIST's Figure 9-13 from NCSTAR 1-9's fire simulation chapter, the NIST argues that on floor 12, a heat release rate of 200 MW was sustained for over
2 hours from about 3 p.m. onward.
The NIST figure 9-11, indicates that fully developed fires covered an area of 750 square meters between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.
The problem is, the NIST used a fuel loading factor of
32 kg per square meter for their floor 12 simulations.
The NIST's heat release rate of 200 MW sustained for over 2 hours implies a total energy release of 1,440 GJ.
To do this, it has to be assumed that the combustible material on floor 12 of WTC7 released 20 MJ/kg.
Over an area of 750 square meters, that would represent the combustion of 72,000 kg of office material.
In other words
96 kg per square meter.
Knock the NIST time estimate down to
40 minutes, instead of 2 hours, and then their 32 kg per square meter fuel loading factor becomes in agreement with the 12th floor fuel load that the NIST has assumed.
You can only imagine how this grave error would wreak havoc with the NIST computer simulation results.
MM