I actually missed it was you from the other thread when I replied to this.
Hello again.
First off, I don't believe for a second what the MSM says about 9-11.
I have been down the whole "Falcon Handler" rabbit hole and have seen how it connects to Benghazi and all the rest. 9-11 will turn out to be an inside job, bet your house on it.
I also know fuck all about metalurgy, FUCK ALL, but still enough to know that steel does not have (point) at which it is weakened but an decreasing tensile strength proportional to temperature.
Read :-
Steel behaviour under elevated temperature
Like all materials, steel weakens with an increase in temperature. Strength loss for steel is generally accepted to begin at about 300ºC and increases rapidly after 400ºC. By 550ºC steel retains about 60% of its room temperature yield strength. However, at temperatures below about 600ºC, if the steel is cooled it returns to its original strength, stiffness and ductility.
Here is the Documentary I referenced:-
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/featheredcocaine
"Feathered Cocaine" - The Falcon Handler who knew where Bin Laden was.
I actually missed it was you from the other thread when I replied to this.
Hello again.
First off, I don't believe for a second what the MSM says about 9-11.
I have been down the whole "Falcon Handler" rabbit hole and have seen how it connects to Benghazi and all the rest. 9-11 will turn out to be an inside job, bet your house on it.
I also know fuck all about metalurgy, FUCK ALL, but still enough to know that steel does not have (point) at which it is weakened but an decreasing tensile strength proportional to temperature.
Read :-
Steel behaviour under elevated temperature
Like all materials, steel weakens with an increase in temperature. Strength loss for steel is generally accepted to begin at about 300ºC and increases rapidly after 400ºC. By 550ºC steel retains about 60% of its room temperature yield strength. However, at temperatures below about 600ºC, if the steel is cooled it returns to its original strength, stiffness and ductility.