Originally posted by JIMC5499
The alloy of steel used in its construction was selected for it's ability to maintain enough strength for the operation of this chamber plus a factor
of safety.
Factor of safety aside (were those chamber walls thicker than the box columns in core, Val?),
This was taken from page 54 (61 of the PDF) of the University of Edinburgh study on the effects of heating on steel-framed structures:
The temperature dependent stress-strain properties of concrete and steel were taken from EC2 [3] and EC3 [2] respectively. As discussed earlier
the effect of steel stress-strain properties is very limited and the results are not sensitive to minor variations in these.
www.studyof911.com...
Claiming foul on the type of steel, unless drastically different and therefore not even steel by conventional standards, is doing what's called
"playing the subtleties" as if they make huge differences, when they do not. The above quote is from an extensive study involving lab tests. All
you have are words you can post on a forum, JIMC.
"Playing the subtleties" as, in other words, comparing two different colored apples and saying one is an orange.
[edit on 21-6-2007 by bsbray11]