rosco rathbone
1. f3e5 2. g4??
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2002
- Posts
- 42,431
sticky_keyboard said:It survived a B-25 crashing into it.
Yeah, but there are acres of valuable floor space devoted to internal columns in that structure.
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sticky_keyboard said:It survived a B-25 crashing into it.
A B-25 is a lot smaller and a lot slower.rosco rathbone said:Yeah, but there are acres of valuable floor space devoted to internal columns in that structure.
Lovelynice said:Re: fires that raged unchecked.
Hmmm...funny, no evidence of that. No witnesses for that either. The very opposite actually.
Kevin Ryan (an executive at Underwriters Laboratories (UL), the company that certified the steel used in the construction of the World Trade Center) seriously questioned the common theory that fuel fires caused the Twin Towers to collapse. - From an email to Dr Frank Gayle (director of the government team)
The evaluation of paint deformation and spheroidization seem very straightforward, and you noted that the samples available were adequate for the investigation. Your comments suggest that the steel was probably exposed to temperatures of only about 500F (250C), which is what one might expect from a thermodynamic analysis of the situation.
However the summary of the new NIST report seems to ignore your findings, as it suggests that these low temperatures caused exposed bits of the building's steel core to "soften and buckle"(5). Additionally this summary states that the perimeter columns softened, yet your findings make clear that "most perimeter panels (157 of 160) saw no temperature above 250C". To soften steel for the purposes of forging, normally temperatures need to be above 1100C. However, this new summary report suggests that much lower temperatures were able to not only soften the steel in a matter of minutes, but lead to rapid structural collapse.
This story just does not add up. If steel from those buildings did soften or melt, I'm sure we can all agree that this was certainly not due to jet fuel fires of any kind, let alone the briefly burning fires in those towers.
Brian Clark, one of the few survivors from above the aircraft impact level in WTC 2 said this of the fires he saw whilst coming down the stairwell: "You could see through the wall and the cracks and see flames just, just licking up, not a roaring inferno, just quiet flames licking up and smoke sort of eking through the wall."
The New York Fire department tapes reveal that there were only small fires
Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven ... Ladder 15, we've got two isolated pockets of fire. We should be able to knock it down with two lines. Radio that, 78th floor numerous 10-45 Code Ones." Ladder 15: "Floor 78?". Battalion Seven Chief: "Ten-four, numerous civilians, we gonna need two engines up here."
The story of Stanley Praimnath who was feet away from the plane impact on WTC 2: "As he curled into a fetal position under his desk, the plane tore into the side of the building and exploded. Miraculously, Stanley was unhurt. However, he could see a flaming wing of the plane in the doorway of his department. Stanley's office resembled a battle zone--walls flattened into dusty heaps, office equipment strewn violently, flames flickering about and rubble everywhere."
Not much evidence of a raging inferno. None in fact.
ruminator said:It does make for a simpler life not to ask questions of events like this one.
Problem Child said:The problem is not with people asking questions. It's with people that totally ignore the overwhelming facts and continue to believe conspiracy theories with no basis in reality.
miles said:You just don't understand. They see things that nobody else can see or ever hope to understand. The rest of us are simply unenlightened.
99.999999% of the population is wrong, and they're right.
Problem Child said:Tune in tommorrow night, same bat time, same bat channel, and see me waste another hour of my night proving that Louis Farrakhan never went up in a giant spaceship to visit The Honorable Elijah Muhammed.
Problem Child said:Ah, another reader of rense.com I see.
Gringao said:You mean that's not true?
ruminator said:There is no truth but the official truth.
I'm glad there aren't any Hunter Thompsom fans here.
Problem Child said:I loved HST.
Do you really think those towers came down due to something other than planes crashing into them?
If so, that surprises me.
ruminator said:Reading some of HST's thoughts on it was one of the most compelling arguments that the whole thing wasn't as it appeared. He was getting close to throwing new light on it and had been working on it since early 2002.
So are we saying his death was to hush up what he was uncovering?ruminator said:Reading some of HST's thoughts on it was one of the most compelling arguments that the whole thing wasn't as it appeared. He was getting close to throwing new light on it and had been working on it since early 2002.
LukkyKnight said:So are we saying his death was to hush up what he was uncovering?
Problem Child said:The problem is not with people asking questions. It's with people that totally ignore the overwhelming facts and continue to believe conspiracy theories with no basis in reality.
Ever read "Killing Time" by Caleb Carr?ruminator said:My favorite conspiracy theory...
lustforlife74 said:Brother, faith is the most deadly thing in world.
LukkyKnight said:Ever read "Killing Time" by Caleb Carr?
LukkyKnight said:Ever read "Killing Time" by Caleb Carr?
The setting and some of the plot devices are distracting, but the thrust of the underlying tenet is chillingly credible to one who has spend decades in D.C.ruminator said:I haven't but I probably will now.
'The greatest truth that information is not knowledge' - from his work, seems to be applicable in many ways.