- #36
Esperanto
- 73
- 0
The amount of fire is much less and smoke much more than during the initial impact and resulting flames. What I meant by there was no fire was that it was neither raging nor able to spread to lower floors considering how contained it was after 15 seconds.
The pancake diagrams were from FEMA's own report. The one where lower floors get pancaked while upper ones stay the same might be because there were 236 exterior columns which the speaker says "were literally on the outside of the building."
Kerosene fire isn't magical enough to break steel. Otherwise, a Nobel Prize is in order.
He did not say all the floors were rigged, and since the trucks could carry 24 foot-long steel beams you might be able to place explosives every other floor. But I don't see what's so monumental about that. And I've read they can be placed much more economically than what you're saying.
He only brings up air resistance to say if the girl leaning outside of the hole tossed a steel beam at the 94th floor it'd take about eight seconds to reach the ground when not taking into consideration resistance. He talks about explosives going off slightly faster than the rubble was falling, but I don't see him giving much importance to either air resistance or structural strength.
He says the heat was at over 1300 F at the south wtc and the building #7 according to NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey thermal image taken five days after the event. The heat has nowhere to go so perhaps the steel-melting kerosene (that magically gets into building #7), or explosives, could be the answer?
Please watch it beginning at 16 minutes all the way through.
You get a point across through advertising. Anti-drug ads do a great job promoting drugs.
The pancake diagrams were from FEMA's own report. The one where lower floors get pancaked while upper ones stay the same might be because there were 236 exterior columns which the speaker says "were literally on the outside of the building."
Kerosene fire isn't magical enough to break steel. Otherwise, a Nobel Prize is in order.
He did not say all the floors were rigged, and since the trucks could carry 24 foot-long steel beams you might be able to place explosives every other floor. But I don't see what's so monumental about that. And I've read they can be placed much more economically than what you're saying.
He only brings up air resistance to say if the girl leaning outside of the hole tossed a steel beam at the 94th floor it'd take about eight seconds to reach the ground when not taking into consideration resistance. He talks about explosives going off slightly faster than the rubble was falling, but I don't see him giving much importance to either air resistance or structural strength.
He says the heat was at over 1300 F at the south wtc and the building #7 according to NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey thermal image taken five days after the event. The heat has nowhere to go so perhaps the steel-melting kerosene (that magically gets into building #7), or explosives, could be the answer?
Please watch it beginning at 16 minutes all the way through.
You get a point across through advertising. Anti-drug ads do a great job promoting drugs.