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Originally posted by Harte
Do you think it was thermite? This is what I asked.
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
The NASA data i am talking about is not from a satellite it is from a aircraft with the Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer system.
Do you think it was thermite? This is what I asked.
Harte
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
The NASA data i am talking about is not from a satellite it is from a aircraft with the Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer system.
Do you think it was thermite? This is what I asked.
Harte
Well going by all the data from NASA and the report from FEMA i am going to have to say that i do believe that thier had to be some Thermite or other material used to keep the metals that hot for that long.
I don't know if i want to say it was a nuke although there were some reports of raditaton.
[edit on 24-7-2006 by ULTIMA1]
Originally posted by billybob
once again....
if you believe gravity alone can bring the towers down, why do you also believe that if there were bombs and incindiaries, that there had to be TONS of them.
Originally posted by Harte
If you want thermite burning for two weeks, you just multiplied the amounts by a couple thousand percent. Now there had to be as much thermite as steel in the towers!
Originally posted by Harte
If you want thermite burning for two weeks, you just multiplied the amounts by a couple thousand percent. Now there had to be as much thermite as steel in the towers!
Originally posted by Harte
AGAIN:
Originally posted by Harte
If you want thermite burning for two weeks, you just multiplied the amounts by a couple thousand percent. Now there had to be as much thermite as steel in the towers!
Harte
Originally posted by Slap Nuts
Originally posted by Harte
If you want thermite burning for two weeks, you just multiplied the amounts by a couple thousand percent. Now there had to be as much thermite as steel in the towers!
What is your source for the thermite REACTION occuring for weeks? The pile was insulated. IT owould retain heat and continue to melt metal for weeks, but where is the source for the REACTION happening for weeks?
Originally posted by Harte
How does a thermite burn translate into "hot spots" weeks later,
Originally posted by Harte
How does a thermite burn translate into "hot spots" weeks later, other than there being a whole lot of thermite (two weeks worth), especially given the absolute fact that there were still ordinary fires burning in, and under, the rubble at the time?
Anyone care to discuss the thermal conductance of steel in this light? You know, the conductance of heat in a solid (or anything else) is directly proportional to the temperature difference between the hot and cool parts that are in contact (delta T). You've all made the argument that fires couldn't have sagged any beams or struts because the WTC was one gigantic "heat sink." Why does this not apply in this case?
Once struts, box columns, braces or whatever are cut with a thermite burn, which I maintain was finished before the collapse (assuming there was such a burn,) why would it continue to "melt" anything at all? Where's this heat source, once the thermite has burned?
How did this steel manage to maintain it's liquidity throughout the collapse, when most of it would certainly have been exposed to moving air, as well as contacted by cool, unmelted members.
Once the collapse is finished, how did all these melted parts, having been completely and randomly jumbled in the collapse, manage to regroup enough to not only remain molten, but to further melt other metals that weren't originally burned by the now-gone thermite reaction?
Originally posted by Slap Nuts
Originally posted by Harte
How does a thermite burn translate into "hot spots" weeks later,
Molten metal insulated by asbestos and a pile of god-knows-what else rubble will stay hot for a very long time whether the reaction is continuing or not.
Originally posted by Harte
I'm saying that by the time the collapse finished is more than enough time for any metal that was melted using thermite to re-solidify.
Originally posted by Slap Nuts
I am saying large pools of molten metal, possibly heated to THOUSANDS OF DEGREES F, that are instantly covered with millions of lbs. of insulating materials WILL NOT instantly solidify as you suggest. I suggest that the "R factor" of such a MASSIVE insulation, that included a lot of asbestos, would be so high that the metal would stay molten for quite some time. Given the particulate size of this insulation, I think it is a safe assumption. This ultra hot metal could also provide enough energy to keep combustables burning for quite some time.
If I recall, thermite heats to 7,000F... That is a LOT of thermal energy under a LOT of insulation.
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
Well, enough thermite to burn for, what, two weeks? You're kidding, right?
I mean, it's hard enough to explain dragging thousands of pounds of thermite into the building and getting all the burn charges set, along with remote ignition,
Notice I said "burns." That's because thermite is not an explosive, not when it's applied to cut steel members (heh heh heh. He said members - Shut up, Beavis. )
Harte
[edit on 7/24/2006 by Harte]
Pics of molten iron across street from WTC 2
www.explosive911analysis.com...
1. who said it would take thousands of pounds when you have a device called a thermite cutter designed to cut beams.
www.explosive911analysis.com...
2. You can get thermite to explode.
THERMITE BOMB: Thermite can be made to explode by taking the cast thermite formula and substituting fine powdered aluminum for the coarse/fine mix. Take 15 grams of first fire mix and put in the center of a piece of aluminum foil.
[edit on 27-7-2006 by ULTIMA1]
Originally posted by ULTIMA1
1. who said it would take thousands of pounds when you have a device called a thermite cutter designed to cut beams.
because I don't know and speculating only makes me look the fool if I'm wrong.