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We don't usually bury them tho ;) https://www.mobilemodular.com/commercial-solutions/blast-resistant-modular#:~:text=%20EXPLOSION%20RESISTANT%2C%20CLIM ATE%20CONTROLLED%20BLAST%20RESISTANT%20MODULES,and %20modules%20are%20engineered%20to%20meet...%20Mor e%20 |
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Anyone read why there were so many cranes around the warehouse?
Being stored there maybe? |
That is interesting Capt, I think Hassan is a liar, from your link:
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Here are video's - watch the 2nd one and wait for the explosion sound.
Any idea as to how far away the video is taken from? <blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Wait for the sound near the end <a href="https://t.co/88wRV90ILE">pic.twitter.com/88wRV90ILE</a></p>— RP (@RafaelPern) <a href="https://twitter.com/RafaelPern/status/1290682173352157184?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 4, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
Bottom was was close to 27 seconds, at 1100 ft/sec, so about 5.5 miles.
Top one is about 5 seconds, about 1 mile. |
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Check out the videos of the Tianjin, China from a few years ago.
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Very informative and interesting article with excellent visuals:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/extra/x2iutcqf1g/beirut-blast |
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Did you see the way they took care of the delelict ship that brought the cargo. They let it sink next to the breakwater. Probably a sign of things to come...
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Post 46 also illustrates how much faster energy moves through the ground than though air.
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^Here's what you do. This video plays the blast in super slo motion around 1:30/ then 2:04. Now go to youtube and put THAT into 0.25 speed and watch it. Turn down the sound. Probably the most detailed video so far. It slows down the frames enough to study each building as it gets hit.
On second though, never mind. I counted three people on the back balconies looking over the edge as the blast hit. Edit- at least five. Everyone was coming out to see what was going on and couldn't see anything. Sickening. |
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It's a rare thing to get such a view into a giant boom. Fascinating but also a tragic loss of life and damage to their economy. It's also a sobering look into what a "limited" tactical nucular exchange would be. |
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The good news is that it looks like the tallest building on the right is probably still under construction, so probably not occupied. It's scary to think that just about anyone in any of those other buildings that were on the facing side may very well have been outside watching the fire. |
I don't understand the fireworks comments. I see what look to be fireworks-type explosions in the seconds leading up to the big kaboom. But certainly they're not really fireworks. Is that some sort of preceding combustion of other explosively flammable materials in the same building? There's no way someone really stores super flammable stuff, like gunpowder or fireworks in the same warehouse full of ammonium nitrate, right?
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Lots of em. Big ones. |
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