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Originally posted by GoldenFleece
And then there are the Pentagon employees who smelled cordite instead of burning jet fuel and the firefighters who used water instead of the FAA-mandated foam on jet fuel fires.
But I'm sure you've got a convenient excuse for all this......sad.
Fire truck 345 from Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Fire Department throws a stream of water into the collapsed point of impact as smoke billows from the Pentagon shortly after an airplane slammed into the west side of the building.
Originally posted by Swampfox46_1999
reply to post by GoldenFleece
However, look closely at your pic and then google search some more...you will see this white stuff all over the...wreckage....thats called AFFF....Aqueas Film Forming FOAM.
Firefighting Products
Class B firefighting foams are the primary agent used for fighting aircraft fires. Foam is defined in NFPA Standard-11 as "a stable aggregation of small bubbles of lower density than oil or water, and shows tenacious qualities for covering horizontal surfaces." Foam is made up of air, a foaming agent and water. It is the air trapped in the bubbles that gives foam its cooling ability.
Extinguishing agents
NFPA 403 also requires that ARFF vehicles carry foam to fight fires involving hydrocarbon fuels. Airports can choose either aqueous filmforming foam (AFFF), fluoroprotein foam (FP) or film-forming fluoroprotein foam (FFFP), or a protein foam (P). Dry chemicals or Halon 1211 or both must also be available as an auxiliary agent.
Foams and Firefighting: Do's and Dont's (FAA)
1. ARFF Foam Purchased After July 1, 2006 Must Meet Mil-F-24385
Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF) agents used in firefighting must meet the requirements of Mil-F-24385. Any AFFF purchased after July 1, 2006 by an airport operator certificated under Part 139 must meet the Mil Spec. There are several reasons for this requirement.
First of all, AFFF has to be compatible when mixed. AFFF manufactured by different manufacturers, although meeting the UL 162 standard, may not be compatible. AFFF meeting the Military Specification will always be compatible with other Military Specification AFFF no matter the manufacturer.
Second, AFFF meeting the military specification requires less agent than AFFF meeting UL 162 to extinguish the same size fire. Finally, the requirement to use Mil Spec is in concert with the National Fire Protection Association National Fire Code 403, paragraph 5.1.2.1.
2. Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF) - less than 3% Concentration
AFFF in concentrations less than 3% is not acceptable to the FAA for use on airports. The 1% concentrate that is available should not be used in ARFF applications because of the difficulty in consistently providing an accurate mixture. Any attempt to use 1% foam would necessitate the installation of a computer-controlled system and each load would have to be checked carefully.
Originally posted by jthomas
Originally posted by GoldenFleece
Watch the debunkers try to go after a Senior Military Affairs Journalist at the Naval Postgraduate School:
Already done:
www.floppingaces.net...
frustratingfraud.blogspot.com...
Must be hard be a Truther these days if you're that desperate, GF, eh?
Considering these accounts, it is perhaps interesting to note the following description of the physical effects of the attack, which was given in the U.S. Department of Defense's book Pentagon 9/11: "The Jet A fuel atomized and quickly combusted, causing explosive bursts as the plane hurtled into the building. A detonation 150 feet inside the building resulted from a 'fuel-air' explosion after the Jet A tanks disintegrated on impact. Here, as elsewhere, there was no uniform pattern of death and destruction. The vagaries of the fuel-air explosions and freakish blast effects meant deaths occurred randomly inside the Pentagon, with the occupants of seemingly more secure interior offices sometimes suffering worse fates than those nearer the outside wall." [Emphasis added] [4]
While these accounts provide us with no clear answers, they do show, again, why we need a proper investigation of 9/11--one that will include a thorough and unrestrained examination of what happened at the Pentagon that day.