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Originally posted by Cassius666
reply to post by Varemia
And therefore the collapse was due to random fire and damage is what you want to say.
Originally posted by ANOK
Originally posted by Varemia
reply to post by loveguy
No, I'm really not understanding your reasoning there. Only the very top portion toppled over. The rest of the tower collapsed in on itself. Since the lower structure was still completely intact, it had no potential to be able to topple over. It was simply too strong. The only path was down, where the crushing debris was tearing it apart from the inside out.
When we look at the collapse we can see the top section tilting at about 15 degrees, then the rest of the building starts to collapse independent of the top faster than the top was rotating, this caused the top to stop it's angular momentum and drop straight down. That is the only way the top could have stopped rotating and drop straight down. Just think about it.
The official story cannot be correct for WTC 2, they didn't even address the problem, conveniently. The only explanation for it comes from a paper by Greening, which unfortunately relies on a lot of the same assumptions NIST did. Unprovable assumption such as the plane damaged the inner core, fires were hot enough to weaken steel to failure, floor trusses can sag AND pull in larger outer columns at the SAME TIME.
We should really be asking why the top did what it did in the first place. There was not enough physical damage from the planes, and the fires were not hot enough to weaken the steel (proven facts, don't even waste our time arguing these points, there are many threads already covering this). The towers should have remained standing.edit on 12/24/2010 by ANOK because: typo
Originally posted by Varemia
Most likely, considering that those are two factors proven to have been there at the time.
Of interest is the maximum value which is fairly regularly found. This value turns out to be around 1200°C, although a typical post-flashover room fire will more commonly be 900~1000°C. The time-temperature curve for the standard fire endurance test, ASTM E 119 [13] goes up to 1260°C, but this is reached only in 8 hr. In actual fact, no jurisdiction demands fire endurance periods for over 4 hr, at which point the curve only reaches 1093°C.