Manchester_lalala
Well-Known Member
In my opinion there is no way fragile aeroplane wings should rip apart huge steel girders like it did. But what the fuck do I know!
It may appear that it wouldn't be possible, but that's what happened.
In my opinion there is no way fragile aeroplane wings should rip apart huge steel girders like it did. But what the fuck do I know!
Always wondered how flimsy wing tips can cut massive steel girders in half!
Hate to be pedantic but Mass x Velocity = Momentum, not Force;-)Mass x Velocity = Force. It's the same reason why a ping pong ball can go all the way through a table tennis bat if fired hard enough. And why water can cut through steel. Also, the wings weren't fragile, they were full of fuel.
All that video proves is why so little of the plane was found at the Pentagon.
It was early in the morning!Hate to be pedantic but Mass x Velocity = Momentum, not Force;-)
What makes you think the wings of a Boeing 767 are flimsy or fragile?
It's not possible to see from the footage how far the wings actually embedded themselves into the WTC anyway so I'm not sure what the point of the comment is or what you'd expect to see. At that sort of speed it's more likely that the huge momentum contained within the wings made them effectively flow past any structure that was too heavy for them to cut through.
Nice to have you back, Mr Bill Murray.Even if you wanted to take on board the official reports of the 3 towers collapsing, it still leaves a lot of questions about the events as a whole.
The mysterious passer by that handed a passport to the police officer. The telephone call that was made through an exchange that was destroyed by fire. The phone call from one of the passengers who introduced himself to his mum by saying "hi mum, it's your son Joe Bloggs speaking, we're being hijacked". The crash site of flight 93 that completely disintegrated leaving no trace of tail section or engines, only a crater, similar to that of munitions crater. Although it apparently hit the ground nose first in one piece, debris was found 8 miles away. The initial denial of a C-130 and A-10 warthog being present just before impact (until that many witnesses came forward, they eventually admitted their presence)
Just as a bit of background, I have worked for over 10 years in the manufacture and testing of materials and components for the internal structure of commercial aircraft.
Planes that hit solid objects don't just disintegrate.
My point is that saying they're flimsy or fragile misrepresents how strong they actually are for the reasons you've said. They may look flimsy but it's difficult to over-estimate the inherent strength in any large aircraft wing. During design, wings are tested to breaking point and the rule of thumb for the breaking point of a wing is roughly applying the weight of the aircraft on to a single wing so for a 767, you could park 3 or 4 38 ton lorries on each wing (if you could fit them there) before they would be close to breaking. So they're not going to snap off before doing quite a lot of damage to whatever they hit.Like all aircraft the wings on a 767 are in a sense flimsy, they have to be pretty flexible even bendy, if they were not they would snap off! The 767 as far as airliners go is a sturdy beast compared for example to the new dreamliners at least in the traditional sense of the word. That doesnt mean that the new Dreamliners are fragile and cobbled together, far from it. They are just made of lots of new light weight material and have wings that are so bendy they are close to flapping like a bird!
I think this article answers most questions about Flight 93.Even if you wanted to take on board the official reports of the 3 towers collapsing, it still leaves a lot of questions about the events as a whole.
The mysterious passer by that handed a passport to the police officer. The telephone call that was made through an exchange that was destroyed by fire. The phone call from one of the passengers who introduced himself to his mum by saying "hi mum, it's your son Joe Bloggs speaking, we're being hijacked". The crash site of flight 93 that completely disintegrated leaving no trace of tail section or engines, only a crater, similar to that of munitions crater. Although it apparently hit the ground nose first in one piece, debris was found 8 miles away. The initial denial of a C-130 and A-10 warthog being present just before impact (until that many witnesses came forward, they eventually admitted their presence)
Just as a bit of background, I have worked for over 10 years in the manufacture and testing of materials and components for the internal structure of commercial aircraft.
Planes that hit solid objects don't just disintegrate.
It's for a 777, not a 767, but this video neatly highlights what you're talking about and shows just how strong aeroplane wings are.My point is that saying they're flimsy or fragile misrepresents how strong they actually are for the reasons you've said. They may look flimsy but it's difficult to over-estimate the inherent strength in any large aircraft wing. During design, wings are tested to breaking point and the rule of thumb for the breaking point of a wing is roughly applying the weight of the aircraft on to a single wing so for a 767, you could park 3 or 4 38 ton lorries on each wing (if you could fit them there) before they would be close to breaking. So they're not going to snap off before doing quite a lot of damage to whatever they hit.
You're right.i predict that by page 3000 of this thread West Didsbury Blue will simply post - "i think it was an inside job too"
FWIW, I think the doubts about Flight 93 are the only ones worth paying any attention to. Mainly because the alternate theory does at least have a modicum of plausibility about it, unlike any of the other conspiracy theories dreamed up about that day. Could the Air Force could have shot down a plane on 9/11? Sure. They certainly had good reason to. And they'd have had good reason to cover it up too, especially after it became clear that the passengers had intended to fight back.Even if you wanted to take on board the official reports of the 3 towers collapsing, it still leaves a lot of questions about the events as a whole.
The mysterious passer by that handed a passport to the police officer. The telephone call that was made through an exchange that was destroyed by fire. The phone call from one of the passengers who introduced himself to his mum by saying "hi mum, it's your son Joe Bloggs speaking, we're being hijacked". The crash site of flight 93 that completely disintegrated leaving no trace of tail section or engines, only a crater, similar to that of munitions crater. Although it apparently hit the ground nose first in one piece, debris was found 8 miles away. The initial denial of a C-130 and A-10 warthog being present just before impact (until that many witnesses came forward, they eventually admitted their presence)
Just as a bit of background, I have worked for over 10 years in the manufacture and testing of materials and components for the internal structure of commercial aircraft.
Planes that hit solid objects don't just disintegrate.
When telephone exchanges catch fire, do all the phone lines immediately stop working or do they progressively fail as the fire takes hold? Or are there back up exchanges in some areas that kick in automatically where loss of communications could be particularly costly?Wow!! That magazine popular mechanics knows EVERYTHING!!
I'm pretty sure that they'll print an example of how telephone exchanges work to a tolerance of absolute zero to 1000 degrees and a percentage of people who speak to their closest relatives using their full name. (sting, bono and Madonna especially)
On that day there was an unbelievable amount of confusion and apparently conflicting stories. Taking one particular witness account as absolute fact doesn't help explain the overall picture. In high stress situations people get details wrong. I'm not saying that was the case with the passport story but I don't expect the policeman stopped to write a contemporaneous account when handed the passport as he normally would. He probably wrote it all down later and maybe didn't get every detail spot on.Not that it makes any difference, clearly, but it was reported that at the time the phone call was made, it had been destroyed.
All I'm saying West didsbury is that when people make too much effort, it arouses suspicion. You think to yourself "why lie? What else is untrue?"
If the Internet was around during JFK, it would be the same. On one side you'd have people saying, "they've found the rifle in the book store, arrested a known communist and seen photos of him holding guns, it's got to be him". People on the other side of the argument were ridiculed and labelled as nutters at best.
FWIW, I think the doubts about Flight 93 are the only ones worth paying any attention to. Mainly because the alternate theory does at least have a modicum of plausibility about it, unlike any of the other conspiracy theories dreamed up about that day. Could the Air Force could have shot down a plane on 9/11? Sure. They certainly had good reason to. And they'd have had good reason to cover it up too, especially after it became clear that the passengers had intended to fight back.
But then the crash site doesn't tally with a missile strike either. Look at Malaysian Airlines Flight 17; bodies and debris were strewn over 20 square miles and large chunks of the plane were still clearly identifiable.
Aeroplanes don't normally crash nosedown at their maximum speed; so maybe they do completely disintegrate under those circumstances. I honestly don't know.
Like this?An aircraft hitting normal or hard ground even if carrying a full fuel load will leave a bloody big crater and some recognisable wreckage,