Empire State Building | All the Secrets of the Engineering Wonder

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 973

  • @SabinCivil
    @SabinCivil  Год назад +166

    Hello everyone, I hope you liked the Empires state building video. Please support Lesics on Patreon - www.patreon.com/Sabins

    • @das-i6481
      @das-i6481 Год назад +3

      I like to pay the money but your payment process asks so may info. Please give is a google pay number for easy payment. Mention in your video at least

    • @internationalenglish7413
      @internationalenglish7413 Год назад +4

      Please write to RUclips CEO Neal Mohan, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, and Education Departments to provide some financial support to this channel. Surely RUclips makes enough money from the ads.

    • @Jrfusion08
      @Jrfusion08 Год назад +2

      Sell ads

    • @alphaapple1375
      @alphaapple1375 Год назад +1

      The Empire State Building withstood the crash of a plane, but not the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, which happened on a Tuesday, September 11, 2001. It was truly tragic but people learn from their experiences and mistakes.

    • @Charles-mv7sv
      @Charles-mv7sv Год назад

      Just want to say Building 7 was demolished professionally.
      9/11 was an inside job

  • @Marshallmiracles
    @Marshallmiracles Год назад +467

    My grandfather was a postman in this building around wartime and told us he made more money in tips from grateful businesses at Christmas time than the postal salary.

    • @burtan2000
      @burtan2000 Год назад

      Same with waiters, bartenders, and hookers

    • @Parapresdokian
      @Parapresdokian Год назад +12

      Sounds Lovely dood.

    • @stevemazz3121
      @stevemazz3121 8 месяцев назад +5

      My daughter is a rural route postal worker and I can state it is the same today. People are surprisingly generous around the holidays.

    • @Martin-iv6lq
      @Martin-iv6lq 6 месяцев назад +2

      My grandfather didn't do nothing like this

    • @detectif1061
      @detectif1061 4 месяца назад

      what is a dood.

  • @sparedbymercy
    @sparedbymercy Год назад +54

    Great work! I love the videos about bridges, buildings, and dams. The explanations of problem solving and construction phasing are top notch. You make me a better civil engineer.

    • @santonio2111
      @santonio2111 Год назад

      You must be poor or unemployed if you can only donate $5. Damn

    • @frankgeorge5770
      @frankgeorge5770 Год назад

      @@santonio2111 shut up..how much did u donate?

    • @golemgolem1674
      @golemgolem1674 11 месяцев назад

      be quiet lil bro
      @@santonio2111

    • @saydaakter981
      @saydaakter981 2 месяца назад

      @@santonio2111how about you donate 10 $ also safe money and not waste and you call him broke?

  • @kannadaHuduga12
    @kannadaHuduga12 Год назад +13

    Thank you for your great science content. I learn a lot through your channel

  • @Akataro128
    @Akataro128 Год назад +28

    I really don’t want this channel to shutdown; I would much rather have this content promoted.

    •  8 месяцев назад

      Is that all you can afford?

    • @da-kw3zs
      @da-kw3zs 5 месяцев назад

      how much did you donate?

  • @ataahmadi
    @ataahmadi Год назад +422

    Your channel is extremely under rated!! I don't understand why people don't want to learn science even when it's represented as best as possible.

  • @kingsand999
    @kingsand999 Год назад +174

    Great video. One correction - the building getting narrower towards the top was not an aesthetic choice, it was a legal requirement. After the Equitable Building was built downtown, all skyscrapers had to have setbacks if they wanted to go higher. This was done so that the buildings would not block the sunlight from hitting the streets. More info here - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1916_Zoning_Resolution

    • @allenkatz5652
      @allenkatz5652 Год назад +18

      The zoning law states that the hypotenuse of a right triangle drawn from the opposite side of the street with a 25 degree angle or so can not touch the building which is why the building needs setbacks every few stories on the lower level. The exception to this rule is that 25% of the lot size can be built as high as technically possible. (This explains why developers buy air rights from neighboring plots.) The last setback the Empire Stare Building needed for the zoning law is at the 29th floor.
      The shape of the building above the 29th floor was to make 8 corner offices while using exactly 25%of the lot size.
      The floors above the 86th floor observatory were intended to be a mooring mast for dirigibles but the plan was put on hold and scrapped after the Hindenburg accident.

    • @keithdiaz5081
      @keithdiaz5081 Год назад +4

      Yes, but they used that as part of there design element towards aesthetic. It was all thought about.

  • @JoselitoBurrito
    @JoselitoBurrito Год назад +571

    There's no way a Channel of this quality can go down. Immediate member. Really hope you can recover 🤞🏻🍀
    RUclips needs to do whatever is in their power to promote free amazing education instead of dumb people fighting over nothing and making millions out of it.

    • @jacksondick2317
      @jacksondick2317 Год назад +13

      cant agree more!

    • @devalsinhy.sindha
      @devalsinhy.sindha Год назад +8

      i think they should also start showing ads because very few people will be supporting. And that will keep it going for even longer !

    • @vitaminb4869
      @vitaminb4869 Год назад +13

      BS with the amount of views he's getting. He's just trying to milk people for more money.

    • @SaddamHussain-we9ec
      @SaddamHussain-we9ec Год назад +2

      @@vitaminb4869 agree, channel with more than even A million subs won't face any financial difficulty and he has 6.31 subs

    • @kalaidoscope-kind
      @kalaidoscope-kind Год назад +2

      ​@@SaddamHussain-we9ecwrong, he has a big team of professionals who need to be paid a fair compensation. A vlogger with 1 million subs however is a totally different scenario.

  • @RAMERAMAProductions
    @RAMERAMAProductions Год назад +44

    I worked for this building for years. Never once was sick of hearing the history and its still my favorite building

  • @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617
    @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617 Год назад +14

    Im a construction worker and a lifelong new Yorker and this building captures my imagination like no other and even with all my structural know-how it still absolutely boggles my mind this masterpiece was built in the middle of the great depression in 13 months...I mean really even with the superior technology of today it takes us much longer to build though I know this could be accomplished today .. regardless of when it'd still amaze me I mean what we can accomplish and create really is something absolutely worthy of awe...man I'm not afraid of heights but it'd take me a long while to be able to do what these guys did and even with much practice I don't know if I could ever be like them walking 1000 feet up as if they were on the sidewalk...im a major architecture buff and I gotta say overall this building is probably my all time favorite and it never ever gets old peering out a window at it or walking into the lobby..it truly is a masterpiece

    • @lauralauren6432
      @lauralauren6432 Год назад +4

      You are Right. It was IMPOSSIBLE then. It is much Older. HIS-STORY is not Our-Story.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Год назад +1

      Excellent--SO---what is your opinion on the contraversial claims, that the Twin Tower's should NOT, have collapsed in the way they did, (without help?)

    • @cornell833
      @cornell833 Год назад +2

      World trade center should have been built like the empire state building 🏢

    • @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617
      @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617 Год назад +2

      @@cornell833 Yea if it the towers were built like ESB I think they'd probably still be standing right now... reminds me of Doc's line to Marty in Back To The Future II where Marty tells Doc to land the Delorean on top of Biff's car.."he'd cut thru us like we were tinfoil" as a kid I didn't understand it but as I got older I clearly saw what he said cuz so many things today are nowhere near as strong as they were 100 years ago and even though the wtc wasn't even close to New when they were destroyed and were built in the late 60s Early 70s even by then numerous things were built significantly weaker..sorry to yap..Im assuming Structural Strength is what u were referring to in your commen

    • @cornell833
      @cornell833 Год назад

      @@antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617 your so correct

  • @darshanvaibhav9098
    @darshanvaibhav9098 Год назад +36

    Dude it's really a good civil informative video . And hats off for your effort on data collection ☺️☺️☺️

  • @ntatenarin
    @ntatenarin 10 месяцев назад +1

    What an amazing and high quality video! Thank you guys so much for posting it. It really made me appreciate the design of the Empire State Building. As for the design, I'll admit that the Chrystler Building looks more like a pencil shape than the Empire, but I get the idea of what the architects were thinking. Both are amazing skyscrapers!

  • @aditiawinata3272
    @aditiawinata3272 Год назад +6

    This is what I'm waiting for lesics, congratulations on your struggle

  • @RaghibAlHasnat
    @RaghibAlHasnat Год назад +4

    One of the best channel I have ever seen. Simple language with attractive graphics. Any one can understood easily about difficult things of engineering. Its very sad to hear the financial problem. Insha Allah, your problem will be solved soon. Hope for the best.

  • @guigui70051
    @guigui70051 Год назад +20

    Notice how it's a Volvo that got hit in the last seconds of the video and go no damage. This channel is really accurate on everything

    • @alig.20
      @alig.20 Год назад +1

      Volvo's safety got nothing to do with the strength of the cars body.

    • @stopmakingsense9915
      @stopmakingsense9915 Год назад

      Spare me….

  • @Dragon905
    @Dragon905 Год назад +59

    Now please do the Twin Towers!

    • @generaliroh842
      @generaliroh842 Год назад +10

      They didnt survive 💀

    • @danikoo582
      @danikoo582 Год назад +1

      ​@@generaliroh842 Very funny dude

    • @generaliroh842
      @generaliroh842 Год назад +5

      @@danikoo582 whats supposed to be funny? What are they gonna talk about in the video anyways if they really did make the video? The magical engineering that failed to hold up against a plane?

    • @danikoo582
      @danikoo582 Год назад

      @@generaliroh842 The way you wrote it and put the skull emoji sounded like you were joking

    • @caesar7734
      @caesar7734 Год назад

      Petronas Towers?

  • @starboy001
    @starboy001 Год назад +5

    What an astonishing way to show the financial crisis. Wishing for the best to you- Lessics/Learn Engineering.💜

  • @arcosprey4811
    @arcosprey4811 Год назад +1

    Easiest Subscription I’ve put in for. I can’t let this channel die, not after how much I’ve learned from it.

  • @thelonenoob2489
    @thelonenoob2489 Год назад +6

    The best channel award goes to Lesics from me ❤️

  • @elconquistador932
    @elconquistador932 Год назад +1

    This video answered several of my life long questions pertaining to the Empire State Building.
    10.9 thumbs up!

  • @yathasone240
    @yathasone240 Год назад +10

    Very Good Explanation with Clear representation

    • @hugocupec3667
      @hugocupec3667 Год назад

      Islsksks!skala!mama!a!a!skla!skala!a!
      Skala?s!s

    • @yathasone240
      @yathasone240 Год назад

      By the way,I like all videos you upload

    • @zohayer.mehtab
      @zohayer.mehtab Год назад +1

      ​@@yathasone240 it's a scammer!

  • @bishwomohan7478
    @bishwomohan7478 Год назад +39

    "does this resemble something?" : my creative mind telling me something else

  • @Parakinese
    @Parakinese Год назад +3

    The animations are very illuminating.
    The pencil comparison for example. But all the othe otherones are so great too.

  • @jaikishansingh5463
    @jaikishansingh5463 Год назад +1

    Thanks

  • @norwegianblue2017
    @norwegianblue2017 Год назад +6

    The quality of all things American built from the 1880s through the 1930s is amazing. From a pair of Levi's to pocket watches to cars to skyscrapers.

  • @tm73827
    @tm73827 Год назад +3

    So happy to see a Lesics video!! 👏👏
    Hope you keep making your incredibly awesome educational content and live on for many more decades.

  • @WittyLaughs-j5d
    @WittyLaughs-j5d Месяц назад

    The narrator is excellent! Their voice is clear and engaging, making the video so much more enjoyable to watch.

  • @jumbolarge108
    @jumbolarge108 Год назад +3

    Really awesome production quality - the building and the video!

  • @coolok6457
    @coolok6457 Год назад

    Thanks for this informative video. I hope you guys do not shut down.

  • @migilmor_trains_and_tips
    @migilmor_trains_and_tips Год назад +9

    You have one correction to make. Ironworkers assembled building by driving hot rivets. High strength bolts weren't used for several more decades.

    • @markkaminski2416
      @markkaminski2416 Год назад

      High strength bolts made their debut in the early 60s. Temporary soft bolts were used to connect members for the riveters to follow.

  • @_Breakdown
    @_Breakdown Год назад +1

    4:22 - - terra cotta GEOMETRIC INTERLOCKING FLOOR - - 4:29 - - 4:36
    0:45 - - column placement - - 2:00 + 2:13 - - riveting the columns together - - 6:06 - - prefabricated pieces
    7:10 - - 73 elevators (explained) - - 7:42 - - the foundation (17 meters) - - 8:08 - - airplane engine went through elevator(s)

  • @naveedhussain1801
    @naveedhussain1801 Год назад +2

    Thanks allot for the video after long time i was waiting

  • @toxoidenchantment
    @toxoidenchantment Год назад +1

    the only thing i can do to help my fav channel still affloat is by watching all ads no skipping. to donate i dont have money. thanks for all your hardworks lesics team. i learn alot

  • @budstep7361
    @budstep7361 Год назад +92

    I'm sorry to hear about your financial problems--you make good videos! You don't need all of the fancy animation; simple graphics and good explanations would be fine!

    • @Homer-je1pz
      @Homer-je1pz Год назад +1

      dude shut up and donate

    • @rockeygarcia5865
      @rockeygarcia5865 Год назад +3

      Yes we need this kind of animation. Some of watch his channel to observe how he does this kind of spectacular animations.

  • @TireSpare
    @TireSpare Год назад +1

    wow, this is super amazing, the best video in the youtube i ve ever seen. thank you for posting this educational one . really love it

  • @masere
    @masere Год назад +11

    It was built in 13 months around 90 years ago, no computer aided design, none of the technology we have today. It also was built ahead of schedule and under budget. Compare that to the 6 years with all our modern technology it took to build the new Wembley stadium, which ended up way over schedule and much over budget. How is this possible?

    • @PapaEli-pz8ff
      @PapaEli-pz8ff Год назад +3

      It was also built during the Depression years

    • @georgka74
      @georgka74 Год назад +1

      dont believe this garbage lie about 13 months .... you know its impossible , plus there is NO foto or video evidence of construction

    • @veerlaff5528
      @veerlaff5528 Год назад +1

      I personally think corruption. In Soviet Union, any project deemed important bypasses bureaucracy, building begins without funneling funds, etc

    • @dominiklitwin681
      @dominiklitwin681 Год назад

      created by space creatures in 3 days so end of discussion, gold gate bridge san fransisco either,

  • @debbiekification
    @debbiekification Год назад

    I don't think anyone today could do what these workers have done back then. Such perfect engineering. Something not seen anymore. We give our thanks & gratitude to those hard-working Americans.

  • @mr.technicalverma7506
    @mr.technicalverma7506 Год назад +5

    Iron is the god of construction, hats off for the iron metal 💪🎩🎩

  • @NH3R717
    @NH3R717 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @HobbyOrganist
    @HobbyOrganist Год назад +9

    As I remember back in the 70s, they had a glass showcase with a brick in it, and if I remember right it said they had ordered either 10 million or 100 million bricks for the building and had ONE brick left over!
    Those terra cotta blocks used in the floors were commonly used back then in partition walls and elsewhere, they were why the gothic styled building at 90 West Street which had raging fires after 9/11/01 survived.
    They still use these blocks to-day in home contruction in Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, and I imagine elsewhere in Europe. I saw google street views of a new house under construction in Hungary, it used those same terra cotta blocks which were then faced with stucco, while the roof was made with red terra cotta roofing tiles.
    They are superior to the cheap concrete blocks we use- larger in size and having multiple cavities in them, they have more insulation value than concrete blocks, and since they were clay that was hardened and vitrified by FIRE, they stand up to a fire whereas concrete blocks crack and crumble because concrete is made into a powder by grinding up and burning limestone, adding water and sand to that chemically cures it into a hard form but it's not vitrified like terra cotta

  • @vordman
    @vordman 3 месяца назад

    Even today the Chrysler and the Empire State are the skyscrapers that visitors to NYC want to see most. Great vid btw. Very informative.

  • @TahaKhan-ye2pg
    @TahaKhan-ye2pg Год назад +3

    Thank you team Lesics for continuity ❤

  • @apophis3852
    @apophis3852 Год назад +3

    I really love your channel, I hope people stop watching stupid tikto videos, and spend their time learning from your channel! Love you lesics team! 💪💯🔥 Stay strong

  • @badgerboy4448
    @badgerboy4448 Год назад +106

    It's a shame you didn't mention the bricks used in the foundation. They were called Accrington Nori's and they still are the strongest brick in the world. They come from Accrington in Lancashire England. There name comes from Iron being backwards on the mould by accident. They are so strong because the amount of Iron in the clay.

    • @SabinCivil
      @SabinCivil  Год назад +56

      Ohh, thank you for this information. We will add it in the next video of Empire state building.

    • @alistair1978utube
      @alistair1978utube Год назад +3

      Noris. No apostrophe.

    • @Voiceovertehe
      @Voiceovertehe Год назад +5

      Shame on you? Lol jeez get a life

    • @georgka74
      @georgka74 Год назад

      bull shit!

    • @jesuscuzz7299
      @jesuscuzz7299 Год назад +2

      🤓

  • @hugoheredia5311
    @hugoheredia5311 Год назад +3

    Very interesting, thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience. Congratulations 👍

  • @myfreedomfirst
    @myfreedomfirst Год назад +7

    You should compare this building to the Twin Towers which went down on 911. They were built quiet differently.

  • @kermitefrog64
    @kermitefrog64 Год назад +2

    This is one example of old school engineering provided the best results 👍.

  • @GeorgeVenturi
    @GeorgeVenturi Год назад +2

    Awesome video!!!

  • @sangram.methry
    @sangram.methry Год назад +4

    Nice knowledge 👌

  • @Mccade1
    @Mccade1 Год назад +2

    Such quality content, idk my RUclips isn't promoting it to more people!

  • @biscuitag97
    @biscuitag97 Год назад +8

    I knew a guy who redid the HVAC in the building. He said there were still burn marks and small aircraft parts behind the finishes.

  • @johnstephen3043
    @johnstephen3043 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @rjmprod
    @rjmprod Год назад +6

    Unbelievable that this was done in 13 months even by today’s standards that would be fast incredibly fast

  • @muralidharan6755
    @muralidharan6755 Год назад +1

    Thank you Lesics for the awesome details and information.

  • @GOJIRADOR
    @GOJIRADOR Год назад +4

    It's been said that the stepped design of the buildings is due to air rights regulations in New York city but I saw no mention of that in this video and instead it would seem that this video suggests it was a purely aesthetic choice. Please explain

    • @ceva321
      @ceva321 Год назад +1

      All tall buildings in NYC had to adhere to a 1916 zoning law, that allows light to infiltrate the streets, as the tower gets taller it gets setbacks

  • @JoeNaeem
    @JoeNaeem Год назад

    Terribly EXCELLENT video! You made me feel so connected to it.

  • @Xiefux
    @Xiefux Год назад +6

    crazy how in 8 years this building will be 100 years old

  • @alm5992
    @alm5992 Год назад +1

    2:06 I thought the guy was cooking hotdogs on a barbecue for a second lol!

  • @elslick
    @elslick Год назад +6

    73 elevators. Well the elevator repair and maintenance team got job security hahaha

  • @trickyricky12147
    @trickyricky12147 16 часов назад

    4:28 Do you think a fiber mesh concrete was used for the floors? This is just an animated construction process, but I would have to guess fiber mesh reinforced concrete wasn't a thing back in the 1930s because this illustrates that no rebar was laid before pouring the concrete floors. I say this to say that whenever rebar isn't used for pouring a slab or for a finish, usually fiber mesh reinforced concrete is poured. More than likely in real life rebar was used. However, in the Empire State Building, it wasn't the main material used for the floors just for a finish as shown here. Great demonstration!

  • @jacobboucher6886
    @jacobboucher6886 9 месяцев назад +5

    A building built almost 100 years ago stood up the impact of a plane, but a 110 story monster with far more advanced engineering collapsed like a house of cards in 2001? Seems legit. Right?

    • @Pagasonic
      @Pagasonic 5 месяцев назад +7

      A tiny plane crashed into the empire state building, but a massive plane going full speed crashed into the twin towers.

    • @davidlane180
      @davidlane180 5 месяцев назад +6

      No, you are simply mis-informed. The plane that crashed into the Empire State Building weighed 33,500 pounds with a maximum fuel of 974 gallons of fuel traveling at a maximum of 275 mph. The 767 that hit the WTC weighed 284,000 pounds, carried 12,100 gallons of fuel and were traveling in excess of 500 mph. Spot the difference. Not being able to comprehend that makes it redundant for me to explain the difference in the construction of the 2 buildings.

  • @paul5683
    @paul5683 Год назад +2

    One thing that I noticed on some old film about the construction of the empire state building was how to achieve the required precision that all the steel beams and girders. After all the plates were riveted together, this would leave both ends rough and uneven, the iron workers would run these assembles through a giant milling machine that would shave both ends to a square and determined length. By making these all square and the same over all length, they could easily take them to the building site and put in the main assembly of the building without much drama to get things to line up.
    The brief moment in the movie clip that had this milling machine, showed it must have been huge. There was one of these Carnegie beams mounted in the machine and the two cutters on either end were both turning. These cutters looked to be about six feet in diameter and the bed of the machine must have been about 50 feet in length.
    I am curious, is that how big i beams are made, no rivets, all welded. But do they still shave the ends to maintain the length and squared ends?

  • @likhith-lexus
    @likhith-lexus Год назад +5

    If this channel's founder doesn't get any rewards or awards. I'm gonna lose faith in humanity

  • @jaffaji
    @jaffaji Год назад

    Thank you so much for making the video for free. I will consider supporting you once I start earning. Thanks

  • @davidkolaga8489
    @davidkolaga8489 Год назад +4

    They were not steelworkers: steelworkers work in the plants that MAKE the steel. The men who erect it are IRONWORKERS

  • @MrPhoenixsuns
    @MrPhoenixsuns Год назад +5

    That plane also wasn’t a Boeing 767 headed from Boston to L.A on a full tank of gas…

    • @supermanepic15
      @supermanepic15 6 месяцев назад +4

      finally someone with commese sense to not even worth to compare a barely loaded b-25 bomber going approach speeds to a fully loaded boeing 767-200 moving at hundreds of miles per hour

  • @rhugvedchaudhari4584
    @rhugvedchaudhari4584 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @internationalenglish7413
    @internationalenglish7413 Год назад +5

    Let us all write to RUclips CEO Neal Mohan, and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, and Education Departments to provide some financial support to this channel. We should also help as much as we can. There are a few excellent educational channels on RUclips. Lots of strange people talking trash, making fake news and political statements have raised millions. And here is a channel that helps us understand technology--about computers, internet, electronic devices, AI, current and future technologies, etc. We need to support it.

  • @charleshines2142
    @charleshines2142 Год назад +1

    I think the stainless steel on the Chrysler building was very carefully chosen when they were looking for one that would stay bright. I heard something about it on one of those educational TV series along time ago. It was probably on the Discovery Channel or a similar one.

  • @bhagirathsinhparmar7970
    @bhagirathsinhparmar7970 Год назад +3

    31 mins since upload and 3.8k views but only 400 likes. I don't understand why people not hitting the like button in such good content

  • @pacz8114
    @pacz8114 Год назад +1

    Informative and professionally executed. Thank you.

  • @manueljuarez3626
    @manueljuarez3626 Год назад +10

    Here come the 9-11 conspiracy theories

  • @kev492001
    @kev492001 Год назад +1

    Nice video. People should look up the building that was there before the ESB, it was beautiful.

    • @ceva321
      @ceva321 Год назад +1

      It was The Waldorf Astoria Hotel

  • @erlakshyajain4692
    @erlakshyajain4692 Год назад +3

    Also please make a animated vedios on related electronics telecommunication engineering

  • @GauravsVault
    @GauravsVault Год назад +1

    Lesics is back yayyy🤩🤩🤩

  • @CP-jt6bw
    @CP-jt6bw Год назад +5

    It helps when there isn't thermite attached to the columns. Like WTC 7. Also known as building 7.

    • @Dec38105
      @Dec38105 Год назад

      lol thermite

    • @ivantoxie
      @ivantoxie Год назад +1

      It also helps when the explosion, amount of fuel, and sustained heat in combination with the overall penetration into the building is not the same, Russian bot.

  • @fibonaccisrazor
    @fibonaccisrazor Год назад +11

    Would be interesting to know if the building was bent after the aircraft crash, even if only a few millimetres or so.

  • @TrainedSniper12
    @TrainedSniper12 Год назад +6

    It sad that this thing was build during the Great Depression and we can’t get our act together now.

  • @pete7182
    @pete7182 Год назад +3

    That plane was much smaller and lower on fuel.

  • @Origen17
    @Origen17 Год назад +6

    The amazing thing is the lack of comments with the obvious observation that the World Trade Centers could not have fallen at free-fall speed because of an airplane crash, given their improved structural rigidity over the ESB

    • @kingsand999
      @kingsand999 Год назад

      Size of the airplane is very different my guy. This is the size comparison - www.physics.smu.edu/pseudo/b767b25.jpg

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Год назад

      Improved rigidity? Look at the structure of the ESB in this video and compare it to the WTC. Likewise consider how the I beam and clay pot floor would stand up against fire compared to the WTC steel truss design (aside from differences between plane crashes).

  • @vthors3000
    @vthors3000 Год назад

    Krpp the videos coming. I really enjoy them. Great work

  • @flavioa6351
    @flavioa6351 Год назад +3

    Nah it stood strong because jet fuel can’t melt steel beams

  • @DrJQureshi
    @DrJQureshi Год назад +1

    Excellent animation, particularly for some new to Steel Structures.

  • @quietquitter6103
    @quietquitter6103 Год назад +136

    More than 20 years later and they're still trying to explain why 3 building on fire with minimal damaged just collapsed into their own footprints.

    • @lyteness859
      @lyteness859 Год назад +57

      it’s not that deep bro💀💀💀newer building uses less material for cost and efficiency because computers were used to avoid unnecessary over engineering to save money, unlike older buildings when not computer aids were available, no one designs a building for taking a hit from an airplane 😅

    • @quietquitter6103
      @quietquitter6103 Год назад +16

      @@lyteness859 It's pretty deep.

    • @Welder19
      @Welder19 Год назад

      @@lyteness859shut up they lied

    • @Welder19
      @Welder19 Год назад +8

      @@lyteness859the building was steel not wood, and hit at the top not the bottom

    • @Welder19
      @Welder19 Год назад +21

      @@lyteness859nobody designs a building for planes to hit it

  • @kartiklahliyan29
    @kartiklahliyan29 Год назад

    Finally sir you upload video, i am waiting for a long time ☺️☺️

  • @justadildeau
    @justadildeau Год назад +6

    Fun fact: zero feminists were used during the construction of this structure

    • @dkurt2725
      @dkurt2725 9 месяцев назад

      It might not be fun for you but at this point you are more obnoxious than those feminists

  • @theyaghu
    @theyaghu Год назад +2

    Seriously 3 months thats huge 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @cherubin7th
    @cherubin7th Год назад +3

    Meanwhile the Twin Towers 💀

  • @danielwalker6653
    @danielwalker6653 Год назад +2

    2 minor nitpicks: You showed the 101st floor as the 102nd. The 102nd is the space with the open-air wrap-around "porch." Secondly, the 1945 crash did damage a floor girder enough to require replacement, but no vertical columns needed replacement.

  • @ethanebang8902
    @ethanebang8902 Год назад +3

    4:14 “…until 1971 when the World Trade Center overtook the record by 83 meters”
    Then by 2001 the Empire State Building reclaimed the title of tallest building in New York due to the size of the World Trade Center dropping to 0m

    • @mrnasty02106
      @mrnasty02106 Год назад

      Now, the New WTC is the tallest in NY and in the USA. NY deserves the titles because it is America's #1 city. I'm happy you didn't mention the Sears Tower. I'll stop right there.

  • @ankitgamit3151
    @ankitgamit3151 Год назад +2

    nice work as always

  • @guestguest62
    @guestguest62 Год назад +4

    What about World Trade Center 😂

    • @guestguest62
      @guestguest62 Год назад

      @lesicsgiveaway.
      What is your telegram
      Are you scamming

  • @TroyQwert
    @TroyQwert Год назад +1

    Great job guys! All was good: animation and the narrative. Really impressive. Thank you! Love ESB. Been there twice. But what I really am missing is twin towers. I've been in the new tower built by their side, but - telling you - without the Twins NYC skyline is not the same. Something will be missing all the way.

  • @jamiec4478
    @jamiec4478 Год назад +4

    Remember when two planes took down three buildings

  • @guy_tech
    @guy_tech Год назад

    Trying to tickle the algorithm, awesome video man!

  • @ariesmight6978
    @ariesmight6978 Год назад +5

    The aircrafts that hit the Twin Towers would have done the same minimal damage. The buildings were filled with explosives.

    • @Dec38105
      @Dec38105 Год назад

      ahahahahahah

    • @dmr8914
      @dmr8914 Год назад

      OMG another conspiracy theorist with no evidence or intelligence. No, the tiny blow-outs of debris when the levels compacted is just the air being forced out and expelling debris. People adding SO MUCH explosives inside would have been easily seen beforehand.

  • @nicholasmaude6906
    @nicholasmaude6906 9 месяцев назад

    There are 103rd and 104th floors too, the 104th floor is the conical room right at the top of the building with the transmission aerial complex mounted on top of it (The 103rd and 104th floors contain the associated transmission electronics cabinets with the 104th floor being completely off-limits to the public).

  • @salvadorcarbajal
    @salvadorcarbajal Год назад +20

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      @luigivitali1020 Год назад

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      @valentindoring Год назад

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  • @matheushuracan
    @matheushuracan Год назад +2

    Amo o lesics força o canal vai em frente

  • @lucathegamer9113
    @lucathegamer9113 Год назад +5

    Then how did the world trade center collapse