Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?

Users Currently Browsing This Topic:
0 Members

Author Topic: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?  (Read 14534 times)

Online Jack Trojan

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 864
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #14 on: May 07, 2020, 12:35:57 AM »
Jack,

Wouldn't the relative seating orientation of Connally also be important to the laser demonstration here besides only showing the angle was 16 deg.?



Yes, the seating orientation of Connally is crucial. Also, the angle was 17 degrees. My point is that it is up to YOU as a surrogate to orient yourself any damn way you please to make the Magic Bullet work. You can slouch or bend forward anyway you like as long as you match JFK's body orientation at the time the Magic Bullet struck him.

You can include Connally into the mix if you like and I can show you how to do that once you get past the Magic Bullet's trajectory thru JFK. The lasers are just a tool to determine the entry/exit wounds of the Magic Bullet, which none of the ballistic experts bothered to utilize in their analyses. They are given way too much credit to sort out the geometry involved. They typically aren't physicists who can calculate bullet trajectories.

Offline Paul May

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 908
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #15 on: May 07, 2020, 12:54:39 AM »
Yes, the seating orientation of Connally is crucial. Also, the angle was 17 degrees. My point is that it is up to YOU as a surrogate to orient yourself any damn way you please to make the Magic Bullet work. You can slouch or bend forward anyway you like as long as you match JFK's body orientation at the time the Magic Bullet struck him.

You can include Connally into the mix if you like and I can show you how to do that once you get past the Magic Bullet's trajectory thru JFK. The lasers are just a tool to determine the entry/exit wounds of the Magic Bullet, which none of the ballistic experts bothered to utilize in their analyses. They are given way too much credit to sort out the geometry involved. They typically aren't physicists who can calculate bullet trajectories.

That’s actually what they do. Forensics ballistics experts specialize in looking at anything that has to do with firearms, from the identification of a specific round or weapon to determining the trajectory of a bullet. Ballistics experts can identify the caliber of a firearm's round and, with the help of national databases, can learn where the bullet was manufactured and possibly even the gun that fired it.

Online Jack Trojan

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 864
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #16 on: May 07, 2020, 01:06:18 AM »
That’s actually what they do. Forensics ballistics experts specialize in looking at anything that has to do with firearms, from the identification of a specific round or weapon to determining the trajectory of a bullet. Ballistics experts can identify the caliber of a firearm's round and, with the help of national databases, can learn where the bullet was manufactured and possibly even the gun that fired it.

What has that got to do with trajectories?

Offline Paul May

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 908
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #17 on: May 07, 2020, 02:35:42 AM »
What has that got to do with trajectories?

Read it again. Determining trajectories is part of the job description.

Offline Bill Chapman

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6506
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #18 on: May 07, 2020, 04:56:53 AM »
What can the ballistic experts tell you anyway? This one is straightforward. Prove that there is a straight-line path from the 6th floor into JFK's back, out his throat and into Connally. This involves an easy peasy experiment that anyone can do. Try it yourself using 2 lasers pointed at each other and get in between them as shown below. Position yourself so that the lasers point to the entrance and exit wounds according to the autopsy photos, then post your results and make us CTs eat crow. I've suggested this definitive challenge for years now and still no takers.



But I must warn you, every LNer that has actually done this experiment doesn't post here anymore.

Name them

Online Jack Trojan

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 864

Offline Brian Roselle

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 125
Re: Question for CTers: Who is the best ballistic expert ?
« Reply #20 on: May 07, 2020, 02:35:14 PM »
Yes, the seating orientation of Connally is crucial. Also, the angle was 17 degrees. My point is that it is up to YOU as a surrogate to orient yourself any damn way you please to make the Magic Bullet work. You can slouch or bend forward anyway you like as long as you match JFK's body orientation at the time the Magic Bullet struck him.

You can include Connally into the mix if you like and I can show you how to do that once you get past the Magic Bullet's trajectory thru JFK. The lasers are just a tool to determine the entry/exit wounds of the Magic Bullet, which none of the ballistic experts bothered to utilize in their analyses. They are given way too much credit to sort out the geometry involved. They typically aren't physicists who can calculate bullet trajectories.

Thanks, I can see the basic idea is to make the triangle to full scale using lasers to check the angle using a full scale general orientation (similar to that seen on a small scale in Croft's picture).