brandnewset

Yeah, ok. Let me spell it out for you: F.A.L.S.E. F.L.A.G.

cell phones don't work on planes f-14 would shoot down 2nd plane any day of the week if there wasn't massive amounts of fuckery going on that day no plane in the field no video's of plane's from 17 camera's @ Pentagon missing gold from WTC vault - gold is an element and cannot 'melt' or 'vapourize' 2 trillion missing no WMD USA is a puppet state is the logical conclusion.

CrudOMatic

They're allergic to logic. They don't understand variables.

grandmacaesar

Why would you assume it was aluminum?

ShineShooter

I call it what it was, controlled demolition.

brandnewset

How many litres of jet fuel did the plane have on board? How much steel could that heat? Surely not enough to heat all the supporting columns to the ground floor.

Sure lucky both towers came down or there may have been an investigation.

ElspethTirel

Pure oxygen, instead of air, is used to increase the flame temperature to allow localized melting of the workpiece material (e.g. steel) in a room environment. A common propane/air flame burns at about 2,250 K (1,980 °C; 3,590 °F),[2] a propane/oxygen flame burns at about 2,526 K (2,253 °C; 4,087 °F),[3] and an acetylene/oxygen flame burns at about 3,773 K (3,500 °C; 6,332 °F)

Torches that do not mix fuel with oxygen (combining, instead, atmospheric air) are not considered oxy-fuel torches and can typically be identified by a single tank (oxy-fuel cutting requires two isolated supplies, fuel and oxygen). Most metals cannot be melted with a single-tank torch. As such, single-tank torches are typically used only for soldering and brazing, rather than welding.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxy-fuel_welding_and_cutting [1]

Do you see that bold sentence? Without force feeding pure oxygen, not even a blowtorch can melt steel, and the fuel used in blow torches burns a lot hotter in air than even jet fuel.

The simple fact is, the colour of the flames coming out of the WTC shows they were burning at around 600o C. Firefighters in the middle of the WTC fires reported small fires that could easily be handled with a few hoses.

If the fires in the core of the WTC were hot enough to soften steel, no firefighter would have been able to get anywhere near those floors, and there certainly wouldn't have been identifiable bodies lying in the middle of it, as the firefighters reported.

ShineShooter

Know that you're arguing against a shill, it doesn't care for information.

CrudOMatic

Hey guys, 80% of America is on the payroll. SHILLS AND DISINFO AGENTS ALL AROUND.

ElspethTirel

It may not, but the people reading it will which is really all that matters to me. Personally, I just try to share as much as I can and delete/retract what turns out to be untrue. I want people to be informed and to make decisions themselves.

rocket_robin_hood

This is correct

ShineShooter

Yours is the best way to comment.

CarlosShyamalan

You caught me, I only glance at the title...

Still though I doubt that theyd be able to differenciate between steel and an alloy that sorta looks like steel in that situation. From what you can see in the aireal photographs you most certainly cant, and in the end that is the only "data" I have here, since people recalling their memory isnt the most reliable source.

Conde_Nast

This SOUNDS like the correct answer at first, especially since a plane is about 90% aluminum. The problem is that aluminum doesn't melt in a orange molten state, it is completely silver.

This was brought up against the government when the fraudulent 9/11 commissions were going on. The government countered this fact by saying "it was molten aluminum mixed with office furniture" and never had a further response to the allegations.

ShineShooter

Would aluminum be burning at that temp? I've ignited some fine powder aluminum with magnesium, and it burned completely. The 'office furniture' response is a pretty shitty cop out.

CarlosShyamalan

As the video says: Molten metal , which could have been all sorts of stuff used in the building or the planes, and melts earlier than steel, such as aluminium, copper and the likes.

arrggg

That was awesome.

Iforgotmy_other_acct

That was great.