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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Hmmm. I tested at 4.25/1.85, almost dead on with Tony Blair. Somehow I think the late hour had some effect on that. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Economic Left/Right: 1.00
Authoritarian/Libertarian: -4.67 |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
same answer twice, -0.75, -0.82
almost neutral. the key word is almost tho http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif EDIT: im almost same as Jean Chretien http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/shock.gif http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/shock.gif http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/shock.gif [ May 22, 2003, 06:32: Message edited by: Taera ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Economic Left/Right: -7.25
Authoritarian/Libertarian: -4.26 Hmmm, on par with Mandela & Gandhi... ANyway, i think this test also depends a lot on where you come from. In my country im on the left side of the spectrum... ON a world view im almost extreme left http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif Questions like :"Marijuana should be legalised" is already a fact here... I think that people who are right-winged in my country (the Netherlands) are considered left winged on this scale. R. [ May 22, 2003, 11:50: Message edited by: Some1 ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Sepultura, etc. should be called 'expatriate Brazilian rock', there is NO space for their kind of music here (studios and radios want to sell other stuff). That being said, it's not my favorite kind of music but my wife likes them a lot.
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Do you mean that the Brazilian radio stations don't play Speed or Death Metal?
That's commun everywhere. Most radio stations only play the more "radio-friendly" alternative rock. The Heaviest we get is usually Metallica and the sort, with bands like Puddle of Mud, Paparoach or Green Day getting most of the air time. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Please, somebody tell me that these calculations are wrong or that the numbers in which these calculations are based are wrong.
Quote:
. . [ May 22, 2003, 16:12: Message edited by: Aloofi ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
You would have to ask a civil engineer, but I get the feeling that the time required for the weight of the collapsing upper stories to crush the supports of each floor beneath them (which is pretty much a simultaneous process, not sequential as the text implies) would be very short.
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Quote:
. .</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">It is his assumptions about each floor taking a full second to shatter that is tripping him up, not the rest of the math. The Twin Towers were designed to be structurally effecient, which means there was very little structural redunancy, and no extra support. The floors were supported basically just at the outer edge, with a small amount in the center around the elavator shafts. Each floor consisted of lots of steel, several inches of concrete, and numerous other things. The kenetic energy of an object falling from a height h and starting from rest (again, in a vacum, like the guy assumed) is m * g * h (mass times gravity times height). Those floors were all very, very heavy. Once they had fallen the height of a single floor they had sufficint kinetic energy to break every remaining floor of the building, even had gravity been cut off at that point. As gravity didn't go away, after two or three floors get crashed the delay due to the rest is negligable. Edit: Oh, and the upper end of his estimate for the collapse of the towers (15 seconds) is about 1.67 times his calculation for gravity in a vacum, hardly close. [ May 22, 2003, 16:45: Message edited by: Jack Simth ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
The guy is wrong. He doesn't understand how the building was designed and what sort of stresses were involved.
Modern structures can't be efficently built to withstand stress in every possible direction. Skyscrapers are designed to withstand downward stress from the weight of the building and occupants, and lateral stress from wind and earthquakes. The structure is carefully designed so that each component does it's share and all the pieces support each other. Basically all the weight of the floors on those buildings was supported by the steel tubing that ran vertically up the outside. All those individual tubes were tied together in effect forming one giant square cylinder. All the floors were mounted to the inside of that cylinder. As the floors fell there was a force downard of kinetic energy and gravity, but there is also a force outward against those tubes from debris and the explosive outrush of air. The hardware mounting the floors to the tubes wasn't designed to resist that kind of stress pushing outwards. In effect the mass of debris falling down inside this tube was pushing the walls outward and breaking loose several floors at a time. So, basically he is right that the floors weren't coming loose one at a time, but he is wrong when he says explosives would have been needed to cause that. Geoschmo |
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