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#21
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 03:27:11 GMT, "Bjørnar Bolsøy" wrote:
Alan Minyard wrote in : On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 21:17:22 GMT, "Bjørnar Bolsøy" wrote: Mark and Kim Smith wrote in : Well sure there were explosives. It's called jet fuel and oxygen. These folks really need to learn how those building were built before they start coming up with these dumb theories. Is it likely to assume that the fuel burned up in the explosion when the airplane impacted? Regards... No, there would be a great deal of fuel remaining. Remember that the "explosion" would rob itself of Oxygen. Looking at the video of the south tower impact, doesn't the huge fireball outside the building seem to suggest that much, if not most, of the fuel burned up on the outside? Regards... No, the "huge fireball" would have consumed a large amount of jet fuel, but not all of it. It is nearly impossible to get "complete" combustion under those circumstances. Al Minyard |
#22
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 21:37:33 GMT, "Bjørnar Bolsøy" wrote:
(B2431) wrote in news:20040112005015.26088.00002571 : From: "Bjørnar Bolsøy" am Date: 1/11/2004 9:27 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: No, there would be a great deal of fuel remaining. Remember that the "explosion" would rob itself of Oxygen. Looking at the video of the south tower impact, doesn't the huge fireball outside the building seem to suggest that much, if not most, of the fuel burned up on the outside? Regards... That fireball was nothing compared to the fireball that would have been generated if all the fuel burned at once. Bear in mind the fuel inside burned for a long time. Well, according to sources I've read most of the fuel burnt up or evaporated in less than a minute. A few minutes at most. To me it seems that the "office fire" theory leaves enough unanswered questions to warrant deeper studies. Not at least because there has been serious fires in high raised steel buildings before and none has ever caused any collapse. Regards... Incorrect, their have been several collapses in high-rise fires, and remember that these buildings were struck by jumbo jets. That has never happened to a high-rise before. Al Minyard |
#23
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Chad Irby wrote:
The closest we've seen was the B-25 that hit the Empire State Building, and that was an order of magnitude less serious to begin with. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. About 20 years ago an A-7 hit a hotel / apartment building broadside in Indianapols. was there secondary fire and colapse from that event? MAH |
#24
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In article , mah wrote:
Chad Irby wrote: The closest we've seen was the B-25 that hit the Empire State Building, and that was an order of magnitude less serious to begin with. About 20 years ago an A-7 hit a hotel / apartment building broadside in Indianapols. was there secondary fire and colapse from that event? Not as such. Of course, the A-7 was going slower, had already bounced off of one building, and had a small fraction of the fuel. The hotel was only seven stories tall, and was steel-reinforced concrete and masonry, not structural steel (and about 1/20 the height). Very different scenarios. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#26
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 03:27:11 GMT, Bjørnar Bolsøy wrote:
Alan Minyard wrote in : On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 21:17:22 GMT, "Bjørnar Bolsøy" wrote: Mark and Kim Smith wrote in : Well sure there were explosives. It's called jet fuel and oxygen. These folks really need to learn how those building were built before they start coming up with these dumb theories. Is it likely to assume that the fuel burned up in the explosion when the airplane impacted? No, there would be a great deal of fuel remaining. Remember that the "explosion" would rob itself of Oxygen. Looking at the video of the south tower impact, doesn't the huge fireball outside the building seem to suggest that much, if not most, of the fuel burned up on the outside? No. It suggests that enough fuel to create a fireball several hundred feet in diameter burned up outside the south tower. FEMA's World Trade Center Building Performance Study [1] estimates that the amount of fuel consumed in the fireball was between 1,000 and 3,000 gallons. The 767 that hit the south tower was carrying about 10,000 gallons of fuel, so that leaves between 7,000 and 9,000 gallons of fuel to help start the fires in the building. The FEMA report assumes the fireballs generated by the impact of AA 11 on the north tower were similar in size, and that a similar amount of fuel remained after the impact. No estimate was made because there is no detailed video footage of the fireballs from the first impact. The bottom line is that a lot of fuel was consumed in the post-impact fireballs, but there was a whole lot more left over. The FEMA study estimates that most of the fuel that remained on the impact floors of the towers was consumed in the first five minutes or so after impact, fully involving almost the entire contents of several floors of each tower in the fires. ljd [1] The FEMA study is available in PDF form at http://www.fema.gov/library/wtcstudy.shtm The discussion of the initial impact and development of the fires is in chapter 2, pp 2-21 and 2-22. |
#27
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 18:29:24 -0600, mah wrote:
Chad Irby wrote: The closest we've seen was the B-25 that hit the Empire State Building, and that was an order of magnitude less serious to begin with. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. About 20 years ago an A-7 hit a hotel / apartment building broadside in Indianapols. was there secondary fire and colapse from that event? MAH That hotel was not a high rise. IIRC it was seven stories tall and the a/c took down portions of five, but since the a/c was so much smaller the building remained, for the most part, structurally intact. Al Minyard |
#28
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About 20 years ago an A-7 hit a hotel / apartment building broadside in
Indianapols. was there secondary fire and colapse from that event? MAH That hotel was not a high rise. IIRC it was seven stories tall and the a/c took down portions of five, but since the a/c was so much smaller the building remained, for the most part, structurally intact. Al Minyard Wasnt that pilot attached to Tonopah TR, and the 4450th at that time? Ron Pilot/Wildland Firefighter |
#29
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