Better try to avoid any half-baked comments...
If you start down THIS path, how will we recognize you...?

Tom
Better try to avoid any half-baked comments...

Um, okay, but I thought that
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/... primer paint – being basically a ceramic material – is chemically stable at temperatures up to 800 °C.
COMPARISON WITH THERMAL STABILITY OF RED/GRAY CHIPS
In contrast to the primer paint, the red/gray chips react violently, igniting in the neighbourhood of 430 °C.
A ceramic is an inorganic, nonmetallic solid prepared by the action of heat and subsequent cooling.
Yeah. That happens when you trust a truther: You end up believing lies and falsehoods.
See, in the very same artcicle, that you link to, Harrit lists the ingredients of the paint he is talking about. Figure 3 lists the pigments (adding up to 100%) and the vehicle (organic compounds, also adding up to 100%)
Harrit makes a big mistake there: He thinks that Zinc Yellow is 20.3% of the wet paint, then subtracts thinner and spirits and says that Zinc Yellow is 34% of the dry paint - but that balloney! We don't know what the ratio of pigment:vehicle was!
In LaClede Paint we know it: 28.5:71.5.
If the same ratio holds for Tnemec, then Zinc Yellow is only 5.8% of the wet paint; after evaporation of thinner and spirits this increases somewhat to ... I am too lazy to compute exactly, but something like 8%. Same correction would apply to all pigments.
At any rate, ergo, Harrit is flat-out wrong: Tnemec primer is, like most other paints, as suspension of mineral pigments in an organic matrix. The organic matrix certainly makes up the majority of volume and mass, and so, by definition, it is NOT "basically a ceramic material", as Harrit wants to make you believe. See Ceramic:
The article also shows that the paint has not degraded or dissolved at temperatures up to 800o C. Hence, it's chemically stable, no matter what its constituents.
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/
In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
The article also shows that the paint has not degraded or dissolved at temperatures up to 800o C. Hence, it's chemically stable, no matter what its constituents.
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/
In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
The article also shows that the paint has not degraded or dissolved at temperatures up to 800o C. Hence, it's chemically stable, no matter what its constituents.
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/
In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this.
Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't?
Millette rules out the presence of elemental aluminium by several means: various solvents, low temperature ashing, and maybe I miss something else.In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
Jim Millette is continuing his work to prepare for a peer-reviewed publication of his WTC dust sample findings and he has one question:
In the original Bentham study, Harrit et al wrote one line about how someone tested known thermite and found iron-rich microspheres. Rather than slog through the Bentham Report yet again, I'm wondering if anyone here knows what that line is about. He'd like to get any information he can about what Harrit et al did, what other studies might be out there re thermitic material and iron-rich microspheres, etc.
Thanks in advance.
Let me help you:
Harrit also does not document any of this crucial element.
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In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
I'm going to answer the highlighted portion plus a bit more.The article also shows that the paint has not degraded or dissolved at temperatures up to 800o C. Hence, it's chemically stable, no matter what its constituents.
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/
In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
The article also shows that the paint has not degraded or dissolved at temperatures up to 800o C. Hence, it's chemically stable, no matter what its constituents.
http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2009/06/21/occams-razor-removes-paint-a-primer-by-niels-harrit/
In contrast, their red-grey chips ignited at temperatures well below this. Millette did not test this because, if I'm understanding this correctly, he saw no evidence of elemental aluminum and therefore concluded that the red layer could not be thermitic. Why do Harrit and Jones find elemental aluminum (in addition to the kaolin platelets) and Millette doesn't? Isn't Millette curious about this? Harrit and Jones tested their hypothesis using the DSC test. Millette didn't. Why not?
Harrit and Jones say there is elemental Al, but they did not prove it. Most of there samples look like clay, and they offer only talk of elemental Al. Take a look at the paper. They had to cherry pick a spectrum to go with their talk. But they made a mistake and included, Fig. (11). XEDS spectra showing the elemental compositions of a grouping of thin platelets, big error. Read the whole paper, look at all their data. The Jones paper included data which confirms the conclusions of Millette, all we have to do is read the whole paper.Thus, while some of the aluminum may be oxidized, there is insufficient oxygen present to account for all of the aluminum; some of the aluminum must therefore exist in elemental form in the red material.
How is this documenting elemental Aluminum? If they said it contain Plutonium, would that be good enough for you?what about on page 27 of the bentham paper?
"Further, we have shown that the red material contains
both elemental aluminum and iron oxide, the ingredients of
thermite, in interesting configuration and intimate mixing in
the surviving chips"