The speed is secondary - what determines the physical limits of the Boeing 767 is Mach number and dynamic pressure.
510 kts at 400 m in standard atmospheric conditions equals Mach 0.775. This is well within the limits of the Boeing 767. But at 400 m it produces a dynamic pressure of 40,567 N/m², and that is too much. The maximum dive speed vD of the 767 is 420 kts.
This only means that flying at 510 kts is illegal, but it is still possible. If the airplane dove down to those 400m from enough altitude, it would entirely be capable to reach this speed, but would slow down once it stops diving.
There are several effects which can cause a catastrophic failure when flying too fast:
When the aircraft flies into a gust, the resulting load factor can overstress the structure.
When the pilot commands large control inputs, he will also overstress the structure.
Flutter might also cause structural damage.
The maximum Mach number of the 767 is 0.91 (0.05 above the maximum cruise Mach number, which is 0.86), and this corresponds to 523 kts in 11,000 m. Thankfully, certification requirements demand a margin of 20% between the maximum speeds and flutter onset speeds, so flutter might be close, but is still tens of miles per hour away when diving to 510 kts. Remember, to experience flutter you need also to excite the motion first. Here is a good discussion of this topic.
In short, flying a Boeing 767 in 400 m at 510 kts is not recommended, but is entirely possible and most likely even safe when done in calm air and by a calm pilot. It only won't last long, because the engines will not produce enough thrust to maintain that speed. Flying this dive requires guts, but no special skills.
You are literally telling straight up lies. It can absolutely fly faster than 200 mph, and regardless it was DIVING and leveled out and then hit.
Nothing you posted referenced sea level, actually no flight level was referenced at all.
NO COMMERCIAL PLANE EVER MADE CAN GO 589 MILES PER HOUR AT SEA LEVEL.
And we are not even addressing the fact that at that speed the plane is completely out of control. Go see the seasoned pilots who attempted to fly simulations to match the speeds, never mind the plane would fly apart AND do keep in mind, there were no planes.
Your field???? THE PLANE WAS FLYING AT SEA LEVEL, AT APPROXIMATELY 1300 FEET.
You cannot fly a plane at sea level at a speed about 200 mph, it will break up. And this CGI image was traveling at 589 mph.
Go away.
You are literally telling straight up lies. It can absolutely fly faster than 200 mph, and regardless it was DIVING and leveled out and then hit.
Of course it can fly faster than 200mph at 30,000 FEET which is what the info you posted is for.
It would break apart at 589mph at 1300 feet which is what the video shows.
But "The Twin Towers differed slightly in height, with one standing 1,368 feet tall and the other rising only to 1,362 feet tall."
No... the info I posted is specifically a discussion of a 767 at sea level. In fact it is specifically about this situation.
Nope, it is not. It is about standard flight capability at 30,000 feet. Which is the optimum flight ceiling for these planes.
Nothing you posted referenced sea level, actually no flight level was referenced at all.
NO COMMERCIAL PLANE EVER MADE CAN GO 589 MILES PER HOUR AT SEA LEVEL.
And we are not even addressing the fact that at that speed the plane is completely out of control. Go see the seasoned pilots who attempted to fly simulations to match the speeds, never mind the plane would fly apart AND do keep in mind, there were no planes.
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-to-fly-a-Boeing-767-over-500mph-at-sea-level?share=1