Message from @Da3m0n2
Discord ID: 632324563341934622
Where's the elevator?
@Ronsheckelson is it in urs
i was schocked when i first heard they basically just build there houses out of wood
Where's the toilets or the stairs or the walls? They use metal studs and drywall
debris
where is the celler?
I'm running on 0%
probably filled with the stuff
Metal studs are not supposed to burn neither is concrete
there stuff isnt made from concrete is it
its wood
wooden walls not even metal profiles in the walls all made of wood
😱
Concrete parking garage burned
I'm hoping I will survive
Your phones at 0%
Yes
How is it still on
Concrete does not actually have a melting point, but it decomposes into various components due to the makeup of concrete, which is mostly sand and gravel with Portland cement added. A temperature of thousands of degrees Fahrenheit is needed to decompose concrete.
As heat is applied to concrete, it breaks down. The water in the mix evaporates into water vapor, while the sand and gravel become molten lava. The different stones contained in the gravel melt at different temperatures, as does the sand. Other metallic components remain unchanged. When the mix cools off and reforms, it is no longer concrete.
Lol
this happens at about 500°C
what is so strange about buildings burnt down and trees no?
i don't get it
This was a vacant building made of concrete and steel. It collapsed at freefall speed
a fire at that scale
i bet the avg temp is higher than 500°C
Was it a fire, or an explosion of some sort?
How does concrete burn?
It can’t
doesn't burn
it "decomposes into various components"
Magma can’t even burn concrete
The building was empty there was no flammable material
i dno what burned there
"As heat is applied to concrete, it breaks down. The water in the mix evaporates into water vapor, while the sand and gravel become molten lava."
the concrete didnt burn at all
"The different stones contained in the gravel melt at different temperatures, as does the sand. Other metallic components remain unchanged."
"A temperature of thousands of degrees Fahrenheit is needed to decompose concrete."