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dadeets wrote:First case at point: Dr. Wood directs us to a photo of the basement of WTC2 two days after the thermal imaging of Sept. 16, 2001.
This is approximately the hotspot location "F"
There appears to be a puddle of water at the bottom of the debris-pit
What is the response to this from those who maintain the thermal imaging data is correct?
femr2 wrote:It's a week or so later (tentatively).
dadeets wrote:femr2 wrote:It's a week or so later (tentatively).
I don't follow where this "week or so" comes from. The AVIRIS data is from Sept. 16, is it not? The photo image was taken Sept. 17 (with caption reading Sept. 18).
femr2 wrote:Do you accept the other points...
It's not at location F.
It's not in the WTC2 basement.
It had been hosed for possibly up to a week.




dadeets wrote:Let's move to another item of evidence.
The grappler lifting the hot slag.
She argues the hydraulic cylinder on the arm of the equipment can not function above 82 deg C. (180 F) because seal compounds would be damage, leakage would occur, and viscosity of the hydraulic fluid become problematic.
I have questions myself of how to analyze the heat transfer up the load into the steel parts of the grappler.
femr2 wrote:Do you accept that your first point has been shown to be inert ?
Slag ?
It's something hot. Very hot.
dadeets wrote:I would agree the distance between the two locations is sufficient to make the argument unpersuasive. But there are several other items of evidence yet to consider. Taken together, they may not be inert.
First case at point: Dr. Wood directs us to a photo of the basement of WTC2 two days after the thermal imaging of Sept. 16, 2001. See http://www.photolibrary.fema.gov/photod ... /3946.jkpg.
This is approximately the hotspot location "F" with a surface temperature of 801 deg F. She says on pate 272 of her book, "There appears to be a puddle of water at the bottom of the debris-pit., and the people walking through it are obviously not cooked. It simply cannot be 800 deg. F at this location."
Slag ?
It's something hot. Very hot.
That is the matter up for discussion. Was it very hot, or not? You would be correct to say it appears very yellow, or white.
femr2 wrote:
The argument about the claw not being able to pick it up because of temperature range limitations is nonsense.
dadeets wrote:femr2 wrote:
The argument about the claw not being able to pick it up because of temperature range limitations is nonsense.
Are you saying the hydraulic cylinder can operate above 82 C, or that the hydraulic cylinder is at a lower temperature than 82 C?
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