Demonstrating the lateral focus I mentioned.
Which focus would you prefer, and why?
Utterly dependant upon the type and location.
Utterly? Why? Got proof? I'd say "somewhat".
You don't know the extent at all. You're handwaving.
This is false. I don't know the extent with much accuracy, but I can limit the extent by referring to experiment and experience. You see, I don't know the distance from here to Fukushima, but I know it is more than 2,000km and less than 20,000km, and that's as accurate as I need it for any practical purposes right now. No need to calculate anything at all, just a quick glance at the globe and referencing my prior knowledge of the distance of other places.
Much in this vein I do not know exactly how lout the bangs would be, but I am extremely confident that it will be less than 160dB and more than 50dB at any location 1-5 blocks away. That is a very wide range, but it suffices for our purposes to estimate that range based on experience and prior knowledge. We are talking about an attenuation of 80dB here - that is immense, and nothing in the known design of the tower suggests that this super-reduction of noise could be approached.
I'd quite like to know fairly accurately.
Why? Appeal to perfection fallacy?
Again, you are assuming my opinion. I'm afraid you're still quite wrong. If I've told you once, ...
Again I am telling you I was addressing your opinion, quoting it verbatim.
Where is your sound-path render answering the question then ?
Appeal to perfection fallacy. We have a large body of similar events (CDs) to compare this to, we have NIST's estimate of how large a charge would have to be for a column at WTC that supports 40 floors, and we have personal experience with sound. All this enables us to estimate that complete muting of many massive detonations towards many recording location is extremely unplausible, and anyone suggesting this needs to work hard to convince us otherwise.
What is the dB reduction ?
Oh it's more than 3dB and less than 80dB.
ROFL. Misleading ? That's funny. Once you have an environment with which you can calculate from source to receiver it can be tested from many locations. You don't have that yet, so whining about what location is referenced is just a bit pathetic.
Alright, alright. 1200ft wasn't misleading. It was
completely wrong.
That's fine. Apply the calcs to them all. Bit boring without actually doing a single scenario check though eh.
Should I do every conceivable scenario? Sift through millions of configurations, and if I find one that makes complete silence for all known recording positions capitulate and congratulate ergo for his great science?
I don't think so. I think ergo should improve on his hypothesis to make it testable.
A boom center of core about 1200ft up. Pick a dB value for the boom, render the wave through all intervening materials accounting for reflection and absorbtion etc. Spit out resultant dB value for a ground level receiver, say, 100m from the base.
Ahhh too bad you repeat the
misleading completely false "1200ft" strawman. Femr, seriously, that smacks of transparent dishonesty. I don't like that at all.
Besides - ground level? Only 100m from base? Was there any known recording made at such an extreme location?
Then you'll have a method. Apply it to other locations.
That is not the only valid method to limit an estimate.
Still results in big bang ? Fine. You have something useful for your purposes. Not doing so...hand wave.
Incorrect.
Strawman. Work it out with the actual structure and scenario on the table, ie intact WTC.
Appeal to perfection fallacy.
Strawman. CC up top were remarkably skinny, as I am sure you know well. Irrelevant to the base technical question to boot.
Skinny compared to what they were at the base. Quite impressive compared to smaller structures.
You see, ergo not only imagines explosives at the plane impact levels high above (where CC had to support 15-30 stories above), but also lower in the towers "at intervals" - remember? Why do you keep ignoring ergo's assumptions? In his sloppiness he fails to mention how deep down he wants to place explosives, but I would say it is fair to say that he imagines some explosives as low as 100m above ground, if not ground level or basement, where they support 80-115 floors. Skinny? Hmmmmmm
Nope. Interested in the ACTUAL effect on such an audio event by the intervening structure. If you're too blinkered by your agenda, that's not my problem, son
I am not much interested in the precise volume at every location around the WTC for every possible arrangement of explosives along the core. I am only interested in the person advancing the total-muting hypothesis to show that it is even remotely possible. No effort from that side, just JAQing off.
You told him he was wrong, when it's a question you can't give a decent answer to.
I tell him that he is wrong. Period.
He asks a question about a hypothetical event that he can't demonstrate to be even remotely possible. No need to answer questions about the elements of a set that is extremely likely empty.
As I said, I don't think it's an unreasonable question. A decent answer or an honest admission that you just don't know (which therefore MUST include the possibility that you may not expect to be able to hear it

)
Well, I do expect to be able to hear it from at least some recording location, 99.9% certain. Why should I bother with even the remotest probability if no one is able to provide evidence for it?
No, I don't know. Might end up a bang loud enough to be detected by a particular directional microphone of a particular camera at the scene, might not. I think the sound pressure wave would be affected significantly by the structure, especially so far up in the air, but I haven't tested it. It should be possible to work it out though within reasonable margins, without too much effort.
Just watch videos of dozends and dozends of CDs, taken from all sorts of locations relative to the source of the bangs. Report what you find!
Until someone does, it's a question that I think would be useful to try and answer.
I have answered it. You just don't like my answer because it isn't perfect.
Do you not agree ??? Strange if not. Would have thought that would be a VERY useful piece of work in environment here.
I do not agree, obviously.
You can do as much private thinking as you like in the most public form you can think of (which I imagine is here) but it doesn't change the fact that, yes, I *deny* that I know what effect the structure would have, though I'd be fairly confident in suggesting that the maximum scale BANG would only be heard along quite a narrow cone laterally outward from the vertical level of the source of such a BANG

How it would all pan out at the various camera locations...not too sure.
This is not supported by plenty of available video of real explosions.
You don't need a line of sight to hear BANG!s. Plus, ergo imagines these massive explosions on
many levels, from 95th floor down to possibly ground level, and we have recordings from many levels. So even if I can't hear some bangs from some levels on some recordings, I am absolutely certain to hear some other bangs very very clearly on some other recordings. If some are focussed away from cam 1 to cam n, there is bound to be some cam n+1 that this blast is focussed towards.
Besides, if all BANGS go out laterally, who will hear them? Yes, everyone in all of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Hoboken. You ought to be able to come up with hundreds of thousands of earwitnesses.
How many do you have?
Zero.
If you *do the math*, cool, let me know. If not, you just don't know. I might get around to it at some point.
Math isn't needed here to refute an outlandish idea, especially since that idea is not defined well enough.
Let me repeat: Appeal to Perfection fallacy. Just because I can't present you a full model and compute it through to spit out some dB value down to 3 digits to the right of the decimal point, doesn't mean the roughest of estimates isn't right and sufficient.
Are you having fun when being lied to?
Doesn't it bother you that ergo had to resort to two lies in the very first paragraph of his OP when trying to convince people that there might be something to his imagination? Why do I have to do the refuting legwork when the original hypothesis rests on nothing but imagination and plain lies?