Milicent Cranor is bitter hag. And a screwball.
Lattimer was the screwball, not Cranor.
I notice you did not address any of the egregious errors that Cranor documented in Lattimer's writings (and there are plenty more where those came from).
Here is Lattimer's SBT model, which shows the back wound
above the throat wound, far above where even the autopsy photo shows it:
Now compare Lattimer's model with the autopsy photo of the back:
Are you kidding me? This is the kind of shoddy, bogus work that your "expert" routinely produced. Can you find me an equally erroneous, misleading model/diagram done by Cranor? If Cranor even once put out such bogus material, I would hesitate to use any of her research. But I'm willing to bet that you guys will keep using Lattimer's material even though you can see with your own eyes how bogus his SBT model was.
The forward movement of the head is an established and irrefutable fact.
Really? Is it an established and irrefutable fact that the head moves forward 2.3 inches? You might want to talk to Dr. Snyder about that. As I said, I hope you're right, but I also know that Snyder's research was so compelling that it convinced Thompson that no such movement occurs.
The 6 mm wide dimension was of the wound in the scalp, not the skull. That wound was a laceration. A tear. No dimensions were given for the entry wound in the skull.
Wrong. Have you never read the autopsy report? Humes said the wound he measured in the scalp corresponded to the underlying wound in the skull:
Situated in the posterior scalp approximately 2.5 cm laterally to the right and slightly above the external occipital protuberance is a lacerated wound measuring 15 x 6 mm. In the underlying bone is a corresponding wound through the skull which exhibits beveling of the margins of the bone when viewed from the inner aspects of the skull. (CE 387, p. 4)
The wound in the skull was the same size as the wound in the scalp, and vice versa, hence the term "corresponding wound."
As for John Mytton's videos that supposedly show the possibility of the jet effect, did you not notice that none of the target objects in the videos has the same weight as a human head and that they are not attached to anything resembling a neck and spinal cord? Did you notice that?
Are you aware that when Alvarez did his experiments, he at least tried to make his target objects somewhat realistic and relevant by using melons wrapped in strapping tape? And, gee, guess what happened? Virtually all the melons moved away from him, i.e., they moved in the same direction as the bullet was traveling.
Look, if you guys want to get on public boards and defend such specious theories as the jet-effect theory as an explanation for Kennedy's head movement, you need to deal with the scientific refutations of the theory that scientists have already written and that are readily available. You could start with Dr. Chambers' debunking of the theory in his book
Head Shot: The Science Behind the JFK Assassination (chapter 9). Or, you could start with Dr. David Mantik's critique of Nicholas Nalli's attempt to resurrect the jet-effect theory--Dr. Mantik's response is available online:
https://themantikview.com/pdf/Omissions_and_Miscalculations_of_Nicholas_Nalli.pdfAnother online study on the absurdity of the jet-effect theory as an explanation for Kennedy's head movement is mechanical engineer Tony Szamboti's article "A Critical Look at Luis Alvarez’s Jet Effect Explanation for the Head Movement of John Kennedy":
http://jfklancer.com/pdf/Jet_Effect_Rebuttal_II_(4-17-2012).pdfAnd let us be clear: No one is saying that the phenomenon of the jet effect does not exist. It does, but only in very specific circumstances. The JFK assassination was not one of those circumstances. There is no way on this planet that a jet effect caused Kennedy's backward head movement, as many physicists have explained.
You guys tend to simply ignore research that refutes your theories, no matter how scholarly the research is and no matter how qualified the authors of the research are. Will anybody on your side ever deal with the evidence and research presented by Mantik, Snyder, Chambers, Hoch, Aguilar, Cunningham, Thomas, Chesser, Riley, etc., etc.? Summarily dismissing research you don't like is not dealing with it; it is avoiding it.