Oh, he’s got sources, alright. What he doesn’t have is reputable, knowledgeable, competent, honest sources. And there’s no way at this late stage in the game that he doesn’t know what he’s spouting isn’t honest.
So where are the two distinct spikes you claimed where there?
Obviously your cousin is In On It.
If your model is psikeyhacker, then you would appear to be seeking martyrdom to revel in your ignorance. psikeyhacker did not just call for tests. He insisted that a specific type of test was the only one he would accept, even though he was shown numerous tests and models over the course of multiple threads over multiple years. And the one test in which he believed, (his own silly washers, paper rolls, and a dowel), was shown to be utterly worthless, yet he refused to modify it to actually test anything.
Now you enter the thread, invoking his name, and making multiple claims without a single shred of support beyond your say so.
You claim that “it is proven” that kerosene cannot fall down an elevator shaft. Where is that proof? Who has shown it to be true and where can we find this information?
You have made the claim that some number of unnamed people have claimed to have reported explosions prior to the planes hitting the building. Provide the citation that demonstrates that many people had that same experience and that they were actually in a position to know what was happening. We have no reason to accept your word.
(You claim that there would not have ben enough air in the elevator shafts to support the sort of fireball experienced at the ground level. That actually would support our position and refute yours. Large amounts of kerosene with small flames would easily have traveled down an elevator shaft, (gravity is funny in acting on all sorts of materials). Hitting the lower levels with opened doors, there would have been a larger supply of air that could have erupted in a fireball in the lobby. That makes more sense than mysterious fireballs that erupt with no known source.
We are not dismissive of you because you are one more CT adherent, (your ironic use of "true believers, notwithstanding), we are dismissive of your ancient claims that have been refuted and rebutted many times in the last twelve and a half years that you offer as declarations of TRUTH without a single source that supports your wild claims.
[QUOTE=Budget Player Cadet]
You know what’s missing here? Citation.
[/QUOTE]
Would you prefer this?
There’s also the possibility of a vacuum effect caused by falling elevators, thereby pulling fire along with them.
Nah. Elevator shafts are not close-fitting tubes around each elevator where they would act like piston cylinders. They are large vertical “rooms” with several elevators sharing the open space. If the elevators fell, they would all have to fall from the same floor at the same time to have any possible (if unlikely) effect of drawing flame down behind them.
You are correct that the elevators aren’t like a piston in a cylinder, the are similar to a car moving down the road. There is a low pressure area behind a rapidly moving object. Or to put it in terms a NASCAR fan would understand the jet fuel might have been drafting. 
Does “drafting” apply if the cars are close together but going off in different directions?
Got any unreliable witnesses for that?
Here is my cite. Cessna Citation family - Wikipedia
Actually, all jokes aside, Liam Scheff (a relatively prominent “conspiracy realist” who thinks that the very term “conspiracy theorist” is a conspiracy to discredit him and his ilk) actually believes that citations are a conspiracy. No, I’m not even kidding.
(No, you colossal tool, footnotes are tools that academics use to demonstrate that their opinions aren’t pulled completely out of their asses. No wonder you’re so against them.)
So he’s the original “My post is my cite” guy.
It’s simple logic regarding the elevators. If it was a bomb that blew the doors off the lobby elevator and brought down the building then the people who survived the elevator fire would be dead.
I believe that this quote exemplifies the “pot calling the kettle back”
More like “the black hole calling the kettle black.”
I once received a citation for bravery.
It was a $50 fine.
My family had a Citation in the early 1980s. Pale yellow. Not a bad ride, as I recall.
This is a police citation.