Didnt really answer my question. Was simply pointing out there are 2 different fuels in discussion. I then asked if they knew which burned hotter because I dont. I dont know much about either actually. I do know that it doesnt melt steel the way the powers that be told us
Do gas and jet fuel burn at the same temp when ignited.
Jet fuel = kerosene
Kerosene cannot burn hot enough to melt steel.
neither can office fires fueled by paper, carpet, wood, etc.
Which is what was going on there.
If kerosene melted steel we've got some space heaters that should have collapsed into their footprint by now.
2500 degrees is not hot enough to melt steel?
2500 degrees is the temperature at which steel begins to melt. But kerosene, when not manipulated in a lab, burns, at best, 1800 degrees.
Not enough to melt steel.
A reduction in tensile strength is all that is needed, not molten metal.
It's comments like this that made me believe the narrative.
It's comments like this that came from Rosie Odonell immediately after 9-11 (although she phrased it like a 5 year old retard)
So you KNOW that the planes were using kerosene?
Didnt really answer my question. Was simply pointing out there are 2 different fuels in discussion. I then asked if they knew which burned hotter because I dont. I dont know much about either actually. I do know that it doesnt melt steel the way the powers that be told us