Oz,
My objection to Bazant is the 48 hour timeframe. That is my own personal roadblock since no investigation had even started....
Thanks for this response. I'm quite sure that I understand where you are coming from and where your roadblock is. I am trying to build bridges to our common understanding.
I have been impressed with your posts and the willingness you show to apply reasoning. That is why I wrote the earlier comprehensive replies. I rarely post these days because the technically interesting discussions are mostly over. You appear to me to be a genuine sceptic and wanting to think for yourself. That is rare and I see that you are getting the usual polarised objections. I try to ignore the nonsense, also the trolling and reverse-trolling.

I usually succeed - but not always.
Let me see if there is a possibility of us working through your concerns.
(Note I intend to give step by step responses to your post - I would prefer if you could put yourself into the context I explained in my post #160 - my belated apology for the aggression in the setting of the post - It was an attempt at getting attention away from the detailed nit picking you were being subjected to - it failed...

- however let's try it your way for now.)
While I completely agree that what he postulated was possible,...
...a point of agreement.
...he had at that time assumed things that were not known at the time...
I think most of them were in the public domain of the world of engineering. Therefore legitimate assumptions to an engineer especially one of his academic standing. Let's see:
For example,
Firstly, "the conflagration caused by the aircraft fuel spilled into the structure causes the steel of the columns to be exposed to sustained temperatures..."
It was public knowledge that there was a conflagration. That it was caused by aircraft fuel was a reasonable conclusion even for lay persons. Ditto for sustained temperatures being a reasonable assumption - the actual degrees not available to lay persons but see next point.
apparently exceeding 800ŽC."
A reasonable assumption for him - a professional with ready access to the relevant generic data. If I had been forming the judgement I would have come at the issue from the other direction - he knew that the building collapsed from impact damage and fire damage which accumulated over time. So the temperatures must have been high enough to have an effect. ( And you can add in CD if you want - it doesn't change the argument.

) I wont complicate the discussion or set up potential derails
at this stage - we can go into those bold assertions later if you are interested.
No analysis had been done so he could not possibly know what temperatures were in play. He could postulate based on the energy available from fuel fires but that is simply a guess really.
Not so. Research into building fires has been comprehensive over recent decades and the data well known to engineers and fire specialists. The difference with WTC 9/11 is more rapid start of the fires which was WTC specific. However that makes a worse case so he was on safe ground. Take care you don't fall for the trap of working from details when the big picture approach is readily available. - more on that later.
...Second, there was no evidence that "prolonged heating caused the majority of columns of a single floor to lose their load carrying capacity" 48 hours post collapse. No one even knew how many columns had actually been damaged at that point. Realistically the known damage was what could be seen that that was the exterior columns. Until someone actually saw that the inward bowing had occured (and i'm not sure if that was known 48 hours post collapse) there was no real way to know how many affected columns there were.
Please heed my caution about looking for details and missing the bleeding obvious.
The observable facts were that the buildings collapsed. That means that:
"Realistically the known damage was what could be seen that that was the exterior columns." >>> The known damage was that
all the columns had failed. The building collapsed. No need to look for which one first or how many started it at this stage. Try working the logic from what is known in context. For this item it is "all columns failed". (If you want to include CD in the reasons I'm quite willing to leave CD on the table as a factor at this stage of our discussions.)
Third, "The heating is probably accelerated by a loss of the protective thermal insulation of steel during the initial blast." while again a postulation could be made here based on the energy of impact, this feature was again unknown until much later.
Don't miss the context - he is setting up an analysis AND don't miss the key word "
probably". You are putting forward an alternate argument. Whether you are right or not matters little. His assumption of "probably" is valid for purposes of his paper. More important he is stating it for explanatory purposes - it had/has no effect on his argument - whether it was true or not was irrelevant to his paper. Note you cannot say that the the fire insulation remained in place despite the aircraft impact. (You could but I wouldn't be that game...

)
He also indicated that if the upper floors had not remained as a static block then the tower would likely not have collapsed fully...
Also valid BUT remember that it is a valid assumption
for his paper. Whether or not it fits your reasoning
for a different argument 12 years later is a separate issue.
Again, what he is saying makes sense, but it uses a lot of assumptions and information that at the time was unknown.
I'm suggesting that many of what you see as unsupported assumptions are based on known engineering facts. We can work our way through those if you wish
The second issue is that you are approaching your understanding from a different direction to either Bazant or me. We may need to work though that aspect also. Either from your direction OR from mine plus my interpretation of Bazant.
From a purely thought experiment point of view it works,...
Yes - and remember that was the
second main purpose of the paper - though I doubt Bazant would use the terminology "thought experiment"
...but as you have shown, his model does not reflect the complex reality of the collapses.
Agreed - but not only me - many others in the discussions here and elsewhere.