I kinda agree with that as well. I personally don’t think it was a DEW weapon that caused this. Wouldn’t the floor have a burn line as well? I think it’s more in relation of the fire/wind that took place outside. The peak or ridge, that appears to have had a metal roof would be the hottest in a “fire sky” situation. As it went across the ridge, not burning the metal, and doing a combustion on the wood underneath. Those are low pitched trusses used here. And in most cases the distance between the top on the vault, and the top of the roof could only be like 4-6 inches. Easily catching fire on a disaster that was outside. I mean fire does crazy stuff to structures sometimes.
But I absolutely don’t believe it had anything to do with wiring. Best case scenario of a wire catching fire is using a 14guage wire, used in most lighting situations, with a 20amp breaker or bigger, would be catastrophic and could easy cause a fire if overloaded. The amperage on the breaker is to high. A 15amp would be plenty big. But, as soon as the switch is flipped, it would’ve started melting then. Not years and years later when a disaster is happening outside.
I kinda agree with that as well. I personally don’t think it was a DEW weapon that caused this. Wouldn’t the floor have a burn line as well? I think it’s more in relation of the fire/wind that took place outside. The peak or ridge, that appears to have had a metal roof would be the hottest in a “fire sky” situation. As it went across the ridge, not burning the metal, and doing a combustion on the wood underneath. Those are low pitched trusses used here. And in most cases the distance between the top on the vault, and the top of the roof could only be like 4-6 inches. Easily catching fire on a disaster that was outside. I mean fire does crazy stuff to structures sometimes.
But I absolutely don’t believe it had anything to do with wiring. Best case scenario of a wire catching fire is using a 14guage wire, used in most lighting situations, with a 20amp breaker or bigger, would be catastrophic and could easy cause a fire if overloaded. The amperage on the breaker is to high. A 15amp would be plenty big. But, as soon as the switch is flipped, it would’ve started melting then. Not years and years later when a disaster is happening outside.