Know More News - Adam Green - Experiments Demonstrate 9-11 Conspiracy Aired: 2021-05-13 Duration: 02:03 [00:00:02] Dropping the steel block first on the floors that met code deflection yielded a very different result. [00:00:10] So I reduced the number of planks which didn't meet deflection criteria, and still the block decelerated and eventually stopped. [00:00:24] Five sheets of glass were broken in that test. [00:00:28] The only thing that I've found that is even similar to what we're doing are people who are trying to disprove 9-11 being a terrorist attack. [00:00:35] I have literally found probably 10 websites using an example of dropping a bowling ball through panes of glass to explain why the Twin Towers is a conspiracy. [00:00:44] ...pizza cover supports as my columns. [00:00:47] Dropping about 15% of the floor system on the lower structure always demonstrated a deceleration. [00:00:55] I even removed the upper plastic supports to make the falling floors denser. [00:01:00] I wanted to make the weakest walls possible, even if it didn't meet deflection codes. [00:01:06] So I used paper and matchsticks for my walls. [00:01:10] Raising the upper floors and dropping them on the lower floors, I didn't get the results I was looking for. [00:01:17] Instead of accelerating down like tower one, the upper floors decelerated, even on the weakest of supports. [00:01:24] But since the towers were burning, I set my model on fire in the hope of replicating the motions observed with them. [00:01:31] Unlike steel, my paper walls burned until they could no longer support the deadloads, and then began to accelerate, but soon that downward motion was arrested and then stopped. [00:01:41] Until the fire weakened the next paper wall. [00:01:44] This continued for quite some time, but never did I witness the acceleration and total destruction of the entire system like we did on September 11th. [00:01:58] Thank you. [00:01:59] Wow! [00:02:00] And that is this week's nerd war.