BigAl
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 5,397
You misunderstood my point about the box columns, however it's not important as I see the dilemma between choosing a model which produces a similar strength to weight ratio, or a model that replicates similar forces.
There is still a problem with the towers' falling, especially World Trade 7: finding an instance in history where fire accomplishes what only a well planned, properly executed controlled demo has done.
Henry Guthard, 70, one of Yamasaki's original partners who also worked as the project manager at the [WTC] site, said, "To hit the building, to disappear, to have pieces come out the other side, it was amazing the building stood. To defend against 5,000 (sic) gallons of ignited fuel in a building of 1350 feet is just not possible.
Report From Ground Zero
http://snurl.com/j54gc (Bottom of page 188)
There was no man-made explosive seen or heard at WTC. Prove me wrong.
10 seconds of video or one clear unambiguous quote will do it. No such quote or video exists.
Here are more steel structures that failed due to only fire.
January of 1997 -- the $15 million dollar Sight and Sound Theater in
Lancaster County, Pa collapsed due to fire.
http://www.interfire.org/res_file/pdf/Tr-097.pdf
Historical Survey of Multistory Building Collapses Due to Fire
By: Jesse Beitel and Nestor Iwankiw, Ph.D., P.E.
http://www.fpemag.com/archives/article.asp?issue_id=27&i=153
On Jan 16, 1967, the steel roof of the McCormick Place in Chicago
collapsed due to fire
Enigma Business Park fire
http://www.bbc.co.uk/herefordandwor...s/2006/11/03/malvern_fire_video_feature.shtml
Dutch fire
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZaK5YVVaRCo
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September/October 2002
Bridge Rebuilt on the Fast Track
by Timothy Barkley and Gary Strasburg
When a crash occurs on a main travel artery, it can back up traffic
for miles-causing a chain reaction affecting every route in the
vicinity. If the incident occurs at an interchange of three major
highways and destroys a well-traveled bridge, transportation officials
have the makings of a major congestion emergency.
This exact scenario occurred at the junction of Interstates 65, 20,
and 59 in downtown Birmingham, AL, on Saturday, January 5, 2002. At
approximately 10 a.m., a gasoline tanker truck hit the I-65 Southbound
bridge. Fire and heat caused the steel girders to sag up to 3 meters
(10 feet) on one side. The interchange was engulfed in smoke that
filled the skyline, visible to motorists and residents of the city.
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Steel building collapsses due to fire.
http://www.charleston.net/news/2007/jun/20/mourning_heroes/
Mourning 9 heroes
By Noah Haglund (Contact), Nadine Parks (Contact), Glenn Smith (Contact)
The Post and Courier
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
'Fearless' Charleston firefighters 'will never be forgotten,' Riley says
Capt. Ralph Linderman of the St. Andrews Fire Department said the
blaze was the hottest he could recall in three decades of
firefighting. "That fire bent steel like a wet noodle," he said.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charleston_Sofa_Super_Store_fire
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(04-29) 12:51 PDT -- A huge ball of fire from an exploding
gasoline tanker melted steel and caused an overpass in the
MacArthur Maze near the East Bay end of the Bay Bridge to collapse
onto the roadway below early Sunday, virtually ensuring major
traffic problems for weeks to come.
The tanker, loaded with 8,600 gallons of unleaded gasoline, was
heading from a refinery in Benicia to a gas station on Hegenberger
Road, in Oakland, shortly before 4 a.m. when it crashed.
Engineers not connected to the incident said the steel underbelly
of the I-580 overpass seems to have heated to a sufficient
temperature to bend -- and that movement pulled the
roadbed off its supports.
"It was so much engulfed in flames, it was hard to see the freeway
itself," Rodriguez told KCBS radio. "It was scary because, you
know, it's metal and cement... You could see the freeway drooping.
It looked like plastic melted. It was unbelievable. It was bent
and finally it just fell and we saw it hit the ground."
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/2007/04/29/BAGVOPHQU46.DTL
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1989 FIRE CLOSES I-78, FORCES DETOURS
http://www.nycroads.com/roads/I-78_NJ/
FIRE CLOSES I-78, FORCES DETOURS: In the early morning hours
of August 7, 1989, a multiple-alarm fire at an illegal garbage
dump underneath I-78 near Newark Airport caused heavy damage to
the freeway overpass. The source of the fire was a mound of
trash 25 feet tall and hundreds of yards long consisting of
scrap wood, plastics and paper. The heat of the fire buckled
the ten-inch concrete surface and melted steel support beams,
and the resulting weight shifts from the highway (which had
sagged nearly a foot)