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Originally posted by Chadwickus
reply to post by itisortofthetruth
The only steel in the building was the core, all the external walls and window frames were aluminium.
What videos show the nose of the plane coming out the other side of the tower?
Originally posted by mastermindkar
as ATS user Bonez used to point out frequently,
Originally posted by itisortofthetruth
How did an all aluminum plane penetrate a steel beamed building?
Originally posted by itisortofthetruth
there should of been a little pancaking of the plane occurring before entering the tower
Originally posted by itisortofthetruth
Another point I want to address was the fact that in one of the many videos the nose of the plane can be seen coming out the other side of the tower in perfect condition.
Originally posted by Observer99
But the "nose of the plane coming out" was due to obvious video fakery.
Originally posted by Chadwickus
The only steel in the building was the core, all the external walls and window frames were aluminium.
Originally posted by Observer99
The flashes are interesting. They could easily be arcing from static electricity. Metal plane, metal building
Originally posted by turbofan
I've always wondered how the wings cut through the steel, and concrete floors.
Originally posted by turbofan
Think of the floor having a steel pan, trusses and a layer of concrete.
The video producer took a still frame of the explosion/dust plume blasting out a window that resembled the nose of the plane and cooked up a fantasy.
Originally posted by _BoneZ_
The planes didn't penetrate the buildings, they penetrated the bolts and welds holding the outer steel columns together, nothing more, nothing less. Bolts and welds are no match for a jetliner traveling circa 500mph.
Originally posted by psikeyhackr
So only 1/3rd of the panels had joints on any given floor.
Originally posted by itisortofthetruth
How did an all aluminum plane penetrate a steel beamed building? According to the Rockwell Hardness Test aluminum places far lower than steel.
Also, here are some basic comparisons between the two Basic Facts
I am just wanting to know how such a basic thing as density and hardness was thrown out the window that day. At best, with the speed factor thrown in there should of been a little pancaking of the plane occurring before entering the tower, but, it was like a knife on butter.
Another point I want to address was the fact that in one of the many videos the nose of the plane can be seen coming out the other side of the tower in perfect condition. All the words I can find for that is, ....what...just...how?
Discuss on, my friends. The truth is what you make it.
Originally posted by _BoneZ_
Originally posted by psikeyhackr
So only 1/3rd of the panels had joints on any given floor.
They weren't joints. The panels were bolted together:
But that doesn't matter because, as I have already stated, the panels themselves were welded together by spandral plates: So the assembly was staggered so that the bolts were not all in the same place, but all of the welds holding the columns together were aplenty. Thus brings me back to the planes breaking the bolts and welds and easily penetrating the perimeter columns with almost zero resistance.
Originally posted by psikeyhackr
The fuselage had a 17 foot radius and the floors were 12 feet apart.
psik
I need to inform you that the nose in/nose out video was a creation made to fool the people into believing in a lie that there were no planes. The creator took 5 frames of the plane going in and the 3 frames of something coming out, picked the two that were the closest in shape, then use Anti Aliasing to round them and make them appear to be the same. In truth, what came out wasn't the same at all.
how does a plane whose wings are designed to disengage on any impact crash through a building with wings intact?