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MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links)
YOUTUBE.com ^ | 8/28/2023 | Hawaii Real Estate

Posted on 08/30/2023 5:14:39 PM PDT by ransomnote

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To: ransomnote

It looks like an insurance scam for an older abandoned vehicle. The guy in the interview talked at 50 mph. He sounded like he was on something.


41 posted on 08/30/2023 6:29:46 PM PDT by Garden Island
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To: Tellurian
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), Tellurian wrote:

Tire fires are hot. Once something ignited the tires (plastic bumper running into flying embers?), the melted Aluminum & Magnesium alloys in the wheels and engine is not surprising.

Am experiment with some industrial tires has a chart showing them reaching a high temperature around 1100 C very quickly (over 2000 F), and staying there for 20-30 minutes, slowly dropping as it burns itself out over an hour or two.

Tires are hard to ignite and slow to burn. These tires were reduced to dust.

"How hot can a tire fire get?  

NTSB tests found wheel components can reach temperatures of 1,300 F. Tires ignite spontaneously at 800-900 F and will reignite over and over again even when suppressed because of the super heat created by the failed wheel-end components.Jul 16, 2007"
 

I don't see how a bumper sets the wheels on fire. Bad design for a car. Not enough fuel and most materials that could burn were reduced to dust. Tires don't explain this.

Is Rubber Flammable?

Technically, rubber is not a substance that can burn. It is even used to put out fires and to make anti-flame materials. So you can say that rubber is not flammable. This is because it has a flashpoint (the temperature at which it catches flame) of around 500 to 600 degrees Fahrenheit, or 260 to 316 degrees Celsius – which is a heat point normally quite hard to achieve. 

If it can come in contact with such a hot object exceeding its flashpoint, then the rubber will undoubtedly burn whether natural or synthetic. But that is hard to achieve in our day-to-day life. 

What Makes Rubber Flammable?

Rubber is an oil-based material, especially synthetic rubber. Hence, it is not that it is not flammable – it’s just thick which makes it difficult for fire to catch and spread easily. Oil burns fast as a flammable liquid, so rubber too can burn for days, being oil in solid form. Thankfully, It is difficult to set rubber on fire because the majority of rubbers only burn at temperatures between 500 – 600°F (260 – 316°C). 

 
 
Generally, car tires will appear to melt at around 1,000°F. But before they get to that point, they will break down at about 390°F and explode at about 750°F, all of which far exceed Arizona's hottest day. Car tires are made of specialized rubber polymers that make up what is called vulcanized rubber.Feb 16, 2022
 
 
What temperature does rubber burn?
 
 
Oil burns fast as a flammable liquid, so rubber too can burn for days, being oil in solid form. Thankfully, It is difficult to set rubber on fire because the majority of rubbers only burn at temperatures between 500 – 600°F (260 – 316°C).
 
 

42 posted on 08/30/2023 6:32:16 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: Garden Island
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), Garden Island wrote:

It looks like an insurance scam for an older abandoned vehicle. The guy in the interview talked at 50 mph. He sounded like he was on something.

This is Hawaii. They don't leave old abandoned cars within view of the road. This is supposed to be the result of the grassfire portion of Hawaii's tragic fires.

Even a flame thrower wouldn't melt a car like this (details upthread)  and the heat would have to be sustained long enough to melt glass. More than one flame thrower would be needed as the damage is relatively uniform all over the body of the car.


43 posted on 08/30/2023 6:36:09 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: BenLurkin

So explain how it happened.


44 posted on 08/30/2023 6:36:32 PM PDT by roving (👌⚓Deplorable Listless Vessel with Trumpitist)
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To: Valpal1
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), Valpal1 wrote:

Bullshit, I’ve seen many burned out cars look like this. Especially if the car is full of camping equipment and clothes or methmaking chemicals. Maui has a sizable homeless population.

 
What burned the tires to ash leaving the steel belt wires on the ground? The cargo in a car and chemicals would have to be evenly applied all over the car to get this kind of damage and still would not supply enough fuel or burn long and hot enough and melt glass etc.
 
"A vehicle fire can generate heat upwards of 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. Keep in mind that water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit and that most foods are cooked at temperatures of less than 500 degrees Fahrenheit. Flames from burning vehicles can often shoot out distances of 10 feet or more."
 
THe fire would not be hot enough, focused enough, or burn long enough to explain the damage in the images.

45 posted on 08/30/2023 6:39:56 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: chuck allen
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), chuck allen wrote:

It was a car fire started by grass. Use logic. Car fires are hot hot hot and glass breaks or melts and so will aluminum.

 
What burned the tires to ash leaving the steel belt wires on the ground? The cargo in a car and chemicals would have to be evenly applied all over the car to get this kind of damage and still would not supply enough fuel or burn hot enough and melt glass etc.
 
"A vehicle fire can generate heat upwards of 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. Keep in mind that water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit and that most foods are cooked at temperatures of less than 500 degrees Fahrenheit. Flames from burning vehicles can often shoot out distances of 10 feet or more."
https://www.fairfield-city.org/341/Motor-Vehicle-Fires
 
THe fire would not be hot enough, focused enough, or burn long enough to explain the damage in the images.

46 posted on 08/30/2023 6:41:15 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: TornadoAlley3

 

In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), TornadoAlley3 wrote:

Go search some photos from other fires. The Tubbs fire maybe in Cali.

Lots of photos of melted aluminum on the ground.

I suppose when the chemicals such as oil and gas ignite it gets hot enough.

Not everything is a conspiracy.

 I provided pictures of the Paradise CA fire (2018) in the thread post and it shows a forest fire wherein only the houses burned, not the trees.

Saying another example exists does not negate the current examples.

The fact that Paradise fire exists doesn't mean that it was 'natural' and together the tubbs fire, Paradise fire and Hawaii fires need not be 'natural'.


47 posted on 08/30/2023 6:44:43 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: chuck allen
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), chuck allen wrote:

A vehicle fire can generate heat upwards of 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit.

The average forest fire sends temperatures rocketing up past 800 degrees Celsius (1,472 degrees Fahrenheit), hot enough to cremate a human or melt a camera.

The heat from a car when it’s on fire may cause the windows to break, but there are examples of car windows melting in the heat of a fire. Wildfires can reach temperatures in the range at which glass can burn.

Can we stop this nonsense now, nutjobs used to get banned from this site, Michael Rivero comes to mind, and there were others. Enough with this D.E.W. nonsense!

It does not have to be the result of a D.E.W., but the fire cannot be explained by the amount of fuel and type of fuel and distribution of fire and quality (dust) of the remains. I'd like to know what caused this and the Paradise fire. The people of HI are saying investors are swooping in to buy up the land - I think we should be asking questions.

This 'wildfire' was a grass fire and not much fuel at all in a gravel parking lot. The grass was nearby but the gravel surrounding the car did not contain debris yet the car itself still had debris all around it.


48 posted on 08/30/2023 6:50:00 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: roving

If you have a point, please make it.


49 posted on 08/30/2023 6:51:03 PM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion, or satire, or both.)
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To: marktwain

Car fires are spectacular. Much better than dumpster fires.


50 posted on 08/30/2023 6:54:36 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: vpintheak

 

In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled MORE EVIDENCE - 2 Miles from Lahaina Fire A Melted Car Surrounded by Gravel! D.E.W. or What? (IMAGES from video and video links), vpintheak wrote:

This is conspiracy theory nonsense. Dry, hot, extremely windy. Sparks carry a long way. Dry grass burns easily. I’ve talked to people and woodland firefighters that tell me trees that have no fire near them will simply explode from the high heat nearby.

The car itself is in a gravel parking lot. Even if there had been a patch of grass beneath it there wouldn't be enough fuel to burn hot enough and evenly enough and long enough to burn the car to ashes. While trees may explode from the high heat near by, there was no high heat near this car as the closest is scrub grass in the pics.

"Hawaiian Electric Company said that power lines falling in high winds seem to have caused a fire during the early morning of August 8, but power lines in West Maui had been de-energized for more than six hours by the time a second afternoon fire began in the Lahaina area." CNN yesterday

It need not be D.E.W. but the grassfire was not sufficient, or near enough to the car to toast it.


51 posted on 08/30/2023 6:57:49 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: ransomnote

You don’t need much fuel. Follow the bouncing ball..

Electric line ignites grass fire, winds spread grass fire, 700 degree grass fire ignites car that burns at 1500 degrees, glass breaks and aluminum melts. Front street in Lahaina with hundreds of cars and buildings on fire simultaneously was probably burning hot enough to melt damn near anything within a hundred yards.

I’ve seen cars in flames with nary a grass or forest fire in sight. Let alone a DEW.

My Attorney Father-in Law taught me a lesson long ago, “Shit happens.”


52 posted on 08/30/2023 7:10:45 PM PDT by chuck allen
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To: ransomnote

This is a better video and documents the odd burn pattern I’ve commented about since the day after.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mppuqs7YF0


53 posted on 08/30/2023 7:15:39 PM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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To: ransomnote

Alright then. Someone torched their car.


54 posted on 08/30/2023 7:17:12 PM PDT by vpintheak (There is no Trans. There is only mentally ill)
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To: ransomnote
Is glass really a liquid? How can this be?
55 posted on 08/30/2023 7:17:52 PM PDT by the_daug ( )
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To: the_daug

I am told that Windows glazed generations ago have panes where the glass is thicker at the bottom of the pane.


56 posted on 08/30/2023 7:21:47 PM PDT by KC Burke
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To: ransomnote

Wow, look at all the experts that showed up to debunk this. 🙄

Sometimes when that happens on FR, it’s often because you are very close to the truth. It happened with the vax (and a lot of those folks kind of skulked away into the shadows)


57 posted on 08/30/2023 7:21:53 PM PDT by LilFarmer
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To: ransomnote
Hey Ransom!

Some thoughts on this. A grass fire burning underneath a car has enough heat to ignite the combustible components of the car. ( The Gas tank and rubber tires.) So the fire is not just the grass. The car had enough gasoline, oil, rubber, and plastic that along with the grass caused the damage including melting of the glass.

Picture of a Subaru that on a non combustable surface burning merrily along the side of the road in Tigard OR.

Caption on photo: "Its what makes a Subaru a Subaru!"

People can go to the link and see pictures of burning cars which are probably mostly engine problems.

Unsplash burning car festival

Would have posted some of these but you need to pay for them.

58 posted on 08/30/2023 7:24:27 PM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission ( )
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To: ransomnote

Many trees have adaptations that allow them to survive easier in natural fire. Jack pines and giant sequoias have very thick, fire resistant bark. Most eucalyptus species and pine species utilize tall crowns in order to keep flammable leaves and dead branches high from the ground and away from fire.

Trees in fire-prone areas develop thicker bark, in part, because thick bark does not catch fire or burn easily. It also protects the inside of the trunk, the living tissues that transport water and nutrients, from heat damage during high-frequency, low-intensity fires.

The Best Fire-Resistant Trees to Plant to Create a Defensible ...
Read on to learn about four fire-resistant trees you can plant around your home or business to help maintain a wildfire defensible space on your property:
Coast Live Oak Trees. The Coast Live Oak is an evergreen tree native to California. ...
American Mountain Ash Tree. ...
Beech Tree. ...
Chinese Pistache Tree.

I’ll add that the tress that are not burnt, a lot of them in peoples yards are more that likely irrigated and watered fairly regularly, so that would help as well. Fact is, not all trees burn in a forest fire. There are YouTube’s of people driving out west after fires and you can see the burnt trees and still live ones. Kinda like a tornado tears down one house and leaves the neighbors untouched. Gods will.


59 posted on 08/30/2023 7:31:12 PM PDT by chuck allen
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To: ransomnote

The toasty jeep looks just like my 1999 dodge 1 ton van that burned down in my driveway 10 years ago on a snowy morning... no glass left puddles of aluminum everywhere..... underhood fuel fire... got it shut down pretty quick.... had time to get my daughters guitar out (in its Christmas wrapping) and unhook my log splitter and roll it out of the way ... there was nothing left ... fire truck got stuck in the driveway... deputy showed up to take the report... he asked me what happened ....i said it must of been Al-quaida... he didn’t believe me..


60 posted on 08/30/2023 7:32:05 PM PDT by rebelskid
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