ElMondoHummus
0.25 short of being half-witted
There is no evidence that explosives demolitions were used in at 7 World Trade. Recovered steel shows no signs of such use. No sounds of demolitions were recorded. Fire personnel agree that the building showed signs of collapse.
The following links contain information central to understanding what is currently known about that collapse:
http://wtc7lies.googlepages.com/wtc7engineeringpapers%2Ccollapsehypotheses
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/conspiracy_files/
http://www.debunking911.com/pull.htm
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_fire.html
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_squibs.html
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_damage.html
Now, regarding the "single column failure" theory: As best as I understand things, that was proposed by NIST in 2004, and explained by Gilsanz and Ng in 2007.
http://www.structuremag.org/Archives/2007-11/SF-WTC7-Gilsanz-Nov07.pdf
So in response to the post challenging this hypothesis:
It's a bit more complicated than simply a "critical beam failing". Again:
The way the building handled the load distribution imposed by the discontinuous columns played a part. Plus, if you read the article, the hypothesis is that multiple columns on the east side failed; the significance of column 79 is because the modeling shows that it's the point where global collapse became inevitable; failures beforehand apparently shouldn't have been any more than local.
First of all, the hypothesis is not that only one piece failed. It says that 6 columns failed; it just so happens that one of them was the failure that doomed the rest of the building.
Also: The forces were indeed distributed unevenly. Columns on one side of the building failed; ergo, forces are no longer balanced or "even". I'll let one of the engineers or architects here expound further on that, but simple common sense tells you that when failures to some supports occur, others are stressed relative to their position to the failures.
The distribution of stress is evidenced by the kink in the east penthouse roof, followed by the sinking of the other penthouse, and then the development of a kink in the facade of the building. These stresses progressed from one side of the building to another.
And: It was a non-uniform collapse. The progression of failure went from lower floors up the east side, through to the west, and only then became global. The fact that the debris pile was more or less contained doesn't mean that the collapse was symmetric or uniform at all.
To the first question: Who knows? The point of the single column failure hypothesis is that unique features of the building led to a collapse. As to the second question: Doubt is fine, but it's not an answer. The engineers who've elucidated the single column hypothesis have in fact studied the original design to identify why the collapse progressed as it did. Whether the designers of the building agree or disagree is irrelevant to the discussion. The important part is whether the hypothesis properly explains observations and makes predictions that can be studied. So far, the hypothesis explains the collapse sequence.
If you have any more doubts about the single column theory, then by all means, post them. It may be that the hypothesis is indeed flawed; after all, it's only a proposed model of the collapse, not the final word. I don't know what NIST's ultimate findings will be, and they may depart radically from this thesis. But if you do posts these doubts, I would ask that you actually study the basics of that hypothesis first; your post betrays the fact that you haven't looked into the details of the model you seek to falsify.
The following links contain information central to understanding what is currently known about that collapse:
http://wtc7lies.googlepages.com/wtc7engineeringpapers%2Ccollapsehypotheses
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/conspiracy_files/
http://www.debunking911.com/pull.htm
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_fire.html
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_squibs.html
http://911myths.com/html/wtc7_damage.html
Now, regarding the "single column failure" theory: As best as I understand things, that was proposed by NIST in 2004, and explained by Gilsanz and Ng in 2007.
http://www.structuremag.org/Archives/2007-11/SF-WTC7-Gilsanz-Nov07.pdf
The video, photographic, and first-person account evidence of the collapse of WTC 7 suggests that the impact of debris and resulting fire contributed to the collapse through the weakening of key structural components. The sequence of collapse, most notably the observed behavior of the penthouses, points to several key columns as the first to fail. The failure of column 79 was pivotal in the subsequent global collapse. As shown in the computerized non-linear structural model, its failure initiated the vertical collapse progression. WTC 7's properties of load transfer at floors 5 and 7, when combined with the failure of column 79, led to a horizontal collapse progression, which in turn ultimately resulted in global collapse.
So in response to the post challenging this hypothesis:
Well first off, i don't understand how even if one critical beam did fail somehow, which i believe it would have had to have failed over 3 consecutive floors or something, how that would even explain the collapse as it occurred. We are talking about a very fast and symmetrical collapse that would have required multiple simultaneous failures across the structure.
It's a bit more complicated than simply a "critical beam failing". Again:
WTC 7's properties of load transfer at floors 5 and 7, when combined with the failure of column 79, led to a horizontal collapse progression, which in turn ultimately resulted in global collapse.
The way the building handled the load distribution imposed by the discontinuous columns played a part. Plus, if you read the article, the hypothesis is that multiple columns on the east side failed; the significance of column 79 is because the modeling shows that it's the point where global collapse became inevitable; failures beforehand apparently shouldn't have been any more than local.
If one piece did fail, wouldn't you expect the force to be distributed unevenly, and the collapse to progress from the point of initial failure, and for at least part of the building to resist collapse, causing it to slow down or force a non-uniform collapse.
First of all, the hypothesis is not that only one piece failed. It says that 6 columns failed; it just so happens that one of them was the failure that doomed the rest of the building.
Also: The forces were indeed distributed unevenly. Columns on one side of the building failed; ergo, forces are no longer balanced or "even". I'll let one of the engineers or architects here expound further on that, but simple common sense tells you that when failures to some supports occur, others are stressed relative to their position to the failures.
The distribution of stress is evidenced by the kink in the east penthouse roof, followed by the sinking of the other penthouse, and then the development of a kink in the facade of the building. These stresses progressed from one side of the building to another.
And: It was a non-uniform collapse. The progression of failure went from lower floors up the east side, through to the west, and only then became global. The fact that the debris pile was more or less contained doesn't mean that the collapse was symmetric or uniform at all.
Is there any other case where a failure of a collumn has caused a collapse in this manner to proceed? No there isn't. Can the designers of the building say that if that collumn or collumns failed, that the rest of the structure should have collapsed in that fashion? Doubt it.
To the first question: Who knows? The point of the single column failure hypothesis is that unique features of the building led to a collapse. As to the second question: Doubt is fine, but it's not an answer. The engineers who've elucidated the single column hypothesis have in fact studied the original design to identify why the collapse progressed as it did. Whether the designers of the building agree or disagree is irrelevant to the discussion. The important part is whether the hypothesis properly explains observations and makes predictions that can be studied. So far, the hypothesis explains the collapse sequence.
If you have any more doubts about the single column theory, then by all means, post them. It may be that the hypothesis is indeed flawed; after all, it's only a proposed model of the collapse, not the final word. I don't know what NIST's ultimate findings will be, and they may depart radically from this thesis. But if you do posts these doubts, I would ask that you actually study the basics of that hypothesis first; your post betrays the fact that you haven't looked into the details of the model you seek to falsify.
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