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| Hanger 17 - Panorama Views | |
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| Topic Started: Sep 11 2008, 04:32 AM (503 Views) | |
| DoYouEverWonder | Sep 11 2008, 04:32 AM Post #1 |
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Just found this link that has three interactive panorama views from inside Hanger 17 at Kennedy airport. Some interesting stuff here. Inside Hanger 17 |
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| SPreston | Sep 12 2008, 07:49 PM Post #2 |
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Patriotic American
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Wow. That is really nice on a large screen at full screen. You can rotate the three views downward and backward. You can even look straight up at the ceiling. |
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| Tim Riches | Sep 13 2008, 06:50 AM Post #3 |
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Wow, that is seriously cool! A zoom feature would be nice, but given what was accomplished already, I'm impressed! Technology=WOW! |
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| UKperspective | Sep 21 2008, 01:53 PM Post #4 |
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This is a fascinating record, and I would just like to make an observation which isn't particularly helpful in any debunking of any theory. While these pieces are a tiny fraction of the steelwork from ground zero. It is clear to see that most of them are pretty straight and the damage appears to show signs of joints being ripped apart rather than some kind of explosive cutting method. Specifically you can see broken ends which appear to have right angles which presumably are the result of construction welds being ripped apart. Being familiar with an old port authority movie showing the construction of the towers, these pieces were all originally manufactured so they would fit onto the back of large flat bed trucks to be delivered just in time at the construction site. It makes sense then to suppose that every 36 feet or thereabouts as each piece is joined to the next, there existed be a weak point where a weld was made. In the last few years I have seen many pictues presented as evidence of "thermite" cutting, I have always believed that it is more likely that these rough looking ends of these pieces of steel are the result of the welds fracturing in the collapse of the buildings. |
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| UKperspective | Sep 21 2008, 02:01 PM Post #5 |
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The vehicle tent will not show for me I can hear the dialogue but the video is just white and blank. |
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| DoYouEverWonder | Sep 21 2008, 06:35 PM Post #6 |
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I had always assumed all the joints were welded, but from what I heard, the perimeter curtain wall columns were not? Instead, each section of column connected together like lego blocks and were bolted. If the curtain walls weren't welded, then that's probably why the building broke down into pieces so easily and cleanly. That's another reason why the mechanical floors were so important. The columns on those floors were all set at the same height, creating a seam all the way around the buildings. I believe this 'weakness' was taken advantage of. |
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8:37 AM Nov 28