BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong- the claim is that the burning jet fuel heated the steel to the point where it could no longer support its "load"- causing the WTC to collapse.
Consider yourself corrected
This seems unlikely to me. Given the momentum of the plane, and the fact that it disentgrated on impact, I would think that the jet fuel would have airsoled and ignited moments after impact- leaving very little, if any, of it to heat the steel to the point of structural failure.
The plains didn't disintergrate on impact dumbass. That was the fucking class and air from inside the building. If you watch the post-impact, pre-collapse footage, you can see where the tail of one of the plains is causing a distortion in the smoke being released. Some people sad it looked like the Devil, and this was a sign of the endtimes.
This theory is not only supported by the fireball you see upon airplane impact- but also by the fact that the boiling point of jet fuel (somewhere between 175-275 C) is far below the temperature at which structural steel begins to degrade (375 C). This means that any remaining jet fuel would have vaporized and burned (or have been blown out of the building) long before the temperature was sufficient to cause structural failure- in other words, even IF there was some jet fuel left after the impact- it would be IMPOSSIBLE for there to be "pools" of it lying around for a long enough period to heat the steel to the point of failure.
Just because a liquid has evaporated, doesn't mean it's still not hot or fueling a fire as GAS. Gas that in this case, didn't have any place to go.
Case in point, go boil some water, with an air tight lid on the pot. Let the pot boil dry, and then pull the lid off. You'll be seriously burned by the steam. Provided the preasure of all that heated air doesn't blow the lid off!
Besides that, there are other ways to get a fire up over 500 degrees. Case in point, there was a fire in the Niagara Falls region a week or two ago. A simple house fire reached 2000 DEGREES, from burning wood, paper, and other common house hold cleaners.
The jet fuel helped start the fire. After that, the stuff in the building, like desks, paper, people, cleaning solutions, carpet, etc, fueled it to the point of melting the metal.