femr,
alienentity said:
You are making an assumption (and generally you know how these turn out ) about the point NIST picked. First, you don't really know, you're simply guessing.
No. A simple deducement, determined by cross-referencing the information NIST themselves provide.
And, unsurprisingly, your "deducement" is wrong, Sherlock.
You don't have to deduce anything. You simply have to read very section of the document that you cited.
Here, let me help…
NIST said:
The chosen feature was the top of the parapet wall on the roofline aligned with the east edge of the louvers on the north face.
They traced the point that they said they traced.
Do you know how I know this?
Because, unlike you, engineers are precise when they write things.
To engineers:
"Parapet" does not mean "Penthouse".
"Aligned" does not mean "near".
To engineers:
"Parapet" means "Parapet".
"Aligned" means "Aligned".
and
"… top of the parapet wall on the roofline aligned with the east edge of the louvers … "
means this:
[ETA: 2nd point that was NOT the tracked point.]
Just like it says.
I really hope you're not going to suggest that NIST traced a diagonal, as highlighted by Achimspok earlier in this thread...
http://img263.imageshack.us/img263/304/path2.png
No, Achimspok is just as agenda-driven as you are. Which means that he is on the same absurd Giant Nit Hunt that you are.
And, being as incompetent as you are, he constantly gets things, simple things, all bolluxed up, too.
Plus, NIST's engineers are not incompetent. So they know how to trace falling objects, to pull metrics off of images, to compensate for all manner of things, such as perspective & oblique views.
So a competent NIST engineer might notice that, while properly calculating fall distance, he's stuck at about the 34rd floor, when the roofline drops out of sight. But if he happens to shift his view to the right (being careful to shift parallel to the ground), then he can get all the way down to the 29th floor.
Such as
Amazing what clever, competent people can do, no?
Now, while saying dumb things, you're not going to get all patronizing, are you?
Oh dear. You are.
How stundilicious.
You're *defending* NISTs method for what reason exactly ?
I'm not "defending" them.
I'm pointing out that they are competent professionals.
I've pointed out, for quite some time, that you are not.
NIST's report needs no defense, as far as I can see. Because there is nobody, with the slightest bit of gravitas, background or ability that has launched any competent attack.
What is it that makes you think it's a big deal ? It's pretty poor on their part, but it's pretty clear what they did. Here y'are...
http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/7/563913536.png
(And you know how fine a tooth-comb I've run through the NIST tracing methods )
You couldn't take a fine tooth comb to ANY analysis.
You still deny the fundamental cornerstone of ALL analyses: error analysis.
You think being dismissive of it is humorous, or patronizing.
To anybody in engineering or science, being dismissive of error analysis means that you are an abject technological clown.
You keep making fun of it for me, OK?
It's such a simple point that it's becoming increasingly funny at how many of you NISTians are frothing at the mouth defending them, but, hey, I have the physical video they used, and so might even give you traces of the points in question, comparing them 12 fig 12-75.
It is possible that you might have been competent at some of this.
Your motives, attitude & politics prohibit that.
Along with all the lying you do about your motives. (Whether it is lying to just us, or to both us & yourself, is immaterial.)
So, publish your precious, silly traces. Don't publish your precious, silly traces.
Construct a theory. Don't construct theory.
Who cares, femr?
You can then stop waving your hands around.
You say that you "might even give [us] traces of the points in question..."
And accuse us of "waving our hands around"??
Yes, I do, as otherwise they'd be attempting to trace along a diagonal, and their methods don't work that way.
Silly, silly boy.
No need. The point they traced was on the top of the West Penthouse. End of.
Just the last in a long, long line of "wrong".