Being severed at a 45-degree angle is exactly what is to be expected from a compressive shear failure. You can work it out yourself, if you understand shear and the strength of materials. No "cutting" necessary; only structural overload.
The compression of air from downfalling upper stories will blow out windows easily.
You guys are easy to dupe, when you don't know the subject matter.
Not really. His "sources" typically come from Wikipedia and enjoys speaking down to others to assert his authority...as that last sentence demonstrates. Shill, nothing more.
Being severed at a 45-degree angle is exactly what is to be expected from a compressive shear failure. You can work it out yourself, if you understand shear and the strength of materials. No "cutting" necessary; only structural overload.
The compression of air from downfalling upper stories will blow out windows easily.
You guys are easy to dupe, when you don't know the subject matter.
User name checks out
Not really. His "sources" typically come from Wikipedia and enjoys speaking down to others to assert his authority...as that last sentence demonstrates. Shill, nothing more.