It is you who is thinking up subterfuges, not me. That you might be deliberately trying to fabricate something never occurred to me.
Silly me. Misunderstanding all these coded "inferences." Reminds me of the man in the White House.
I know that my trajectory line is at the correct downward and horizontal angle.
You wrote:
"So - without moving the men - let's see the views from above and
from the side so we can check the angles. There is no way that the
line you have drawn goes from right to left at about 9 degrees and
intersects JBC's right armpit."
No point in me posting any overhead view until this is sorted. Where are you getting 9 degrees?
The HSCA for Z190 has a right-to-left trajectory of about 13 degrees; it doesn't back-project to the SN but nearly so. I'm modelling Z193 because it's the clearest Z-frame in that area. You're modelling, I guess, Z195.
Your trajectory line is at a different angle. That is obvious. I assumed you had made an innocent error and I was just interested in knowing where you went wrong so I could point it out to you.
More of that coded insult stuff.
I don't see how our lines are that different. Similar line-of-sights and the trajectory similarly goes right-to-left and downward.
I have given you my entire Sketchup file so you could check it.
I have not seen such a file. Only frame-grabs posted here. Don't bother sending the file because I won't open it.
You haven't even shown us the overhead views of your trajectory and, apparently, you are reluctant to do that.
Not so much reluctant as I need to do more work for an overhead view. Some limousine details, Connally's torso twist and maybe Kennedy's shoulder line raised. The limo details are essentially done but the rest is major. On my system, it takes about a minute for each move, rotate or scale. I had enough in place a while ago for Zapruder line-of-sight views.
There are other 3D items I work on as well, such as the Holland Theory, the Sniper's Nest precision build, Kennedy head/torso with bone structure, BYP recreation, Z171 recreation, Hickey's semi-standing position and so-on.