But ANFO doesn't behave like that, heres a quote from an
article on the matter:

"Somewhere between ten and fifteen explosives experts and professional engineers have 
written strongly worded opinions that the Murrah building had to have been destroyed 
by interior bombs and that the ANFO truck could not have done the damage. These 
experts included a NASA scientist and demolition experts who have worked in the field 
for thirty years. What is most eye-opening is that even a government report concluded 
that the ANFO truck bomb couldn't have possibly destroyed the Murrah building. In 
early 1997, Wright Laboratory at Elgin Air Force Base in Florida constructed a 
concrete, steel-reinforced structure that was similar to the Murrah Building, and then 
did a series of explosions to test bomb effects. The Air Force structure was not 
nearly as structurally as sound as the Murrah Building, and the bombs used against it 
were more powerful than a 4,800 pound ANFO bomb. Minimal damage was done to the 
structure. Afterwards, the Air Force released a 56-page report that was entitled Case 
Study Relating Bla

jeremyb.

> From: Vik Olliver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: 2002/10/17 Thu PM 09:45:43 GMT+13:00
> To: CLUG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Re: Very OT: bombing
> 
> If you create an FAE explosion there are two blasts. The first one
> scatters oxygen-poor, flammable material into the air, the second one
> detonates it when there's enough air mixed in. The heated, expanding air
> also causes part of the overpressure in the shockwave.
> 
> Vik :v)
> 
> 


Reply via email to