@doctorix
De mauvaise foi en plus, l’analyse des images montrent que la forme n’est pas la même. De plus il existe de nombreuse videos prises sur un autre angle infirmant votre theorie débile du no plane.
Pour l’acier fondu (attention c’est en anglais ) :
« Melted » Steel
Claim :
« We have been lied to, » announces the Web site AttackOnAmerica.net.
"The first lie was that the load of fuel from the aircraft was the cause
of structural failure. No kerosene fire can burn hot enough to melt
steel.« The posting is entitled »Proof Of Controlled Demolition At The
WTC."
FACT :
Jet fuel burns at 800° to 1500°F, not hot enough to melt steel
(2750°F). However, experts agree that for the towers to collapse, their
steel frames didn’t need to melt, they just had to lose some of their
structural strength—and that required exposure to much less heat. "I
have never seen melted steel in a building fire," says retired New York
deputy fire chief Vincent Dunn, author of The Collapse Of Burning
Buildings : A Guide To Fireground Safety. "But I’ve seen a lot of
twisted, warped, bent and sagging steel. What happens is that the steel
tries to expand at both ends, but when it can no longer expand, it sags
and the surrounding concrete cracks.«
»Steel
loses about 50 percent of its strength at 1100°F," notes senior engineer
Farid Alfawak-hiri of the American Institute of Steel Construction.
« And at 1800° it is probably at less than 10 percent. » NIST also
believes that a great deal of the spray-on fireproofing insulation was
likely knocked off the steel beams that were in the path of the crashing
jets, leaving the metal more vulnerable to the heat.
But
jet fuel wasn’t the only thing burning, notes Forman Williams, a
professor of engineering at the University of California, San Diego, and
one of seven structural engineers and fire experts that PM consulted.
He says that while the jet fuel was the catalyst for the WTC fires, the
resulting inferno was intensified by the combustible material inside the
buildings, including rugs, curtains, furniture and paper. NIST reports
that pockets of fire hit 1832°F.
"The jet fuel
was the ignition source,« Williams tells PM. »It burned for maybe 10
minutes, and [the towers] were still standing in 10 minutes. It was the
rest of the stuff burning afterward that was responsible for the heat
transfer that eventually brought them down."