Add to that a rifle that was supposedly loaded with only four bullets.
What makes this unbelievable? As I recall the maximum number of bullets that the cartridge could reliably hold is five. And there might not be enough time to get off all five shots while the target is at a good angle:
* moving away from the shooter.
* moving away from the shooter from a good angle, almost straight behind, which minimizes the angular velocity. This only occurs between about z220 and z345, which covers 6.8 seconds. Attempting 5 aimed shots would only allow 1.7 seconds between each aimed shot.
By the way, the way I think it most likely occurred was:
* shot at z153, which missed the limousine and JFK by 5 feet or more, with an angular velocity of the target of 4.8 degrees per second
* shot at z222, which missed the center of the head by 8 inches, with an angular velocity of the target of 1.9 degrees per second
* shot at z312, which missed the center of the head by 2 inches, with an angular velocity of the target of 0.58 degrees per second
He would have 3.7 seconds to aim between the first and second shots and 4.9 seconds to aim between the second and third.
My original post on his is at:
https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,2640.msg93376.html#msg93376Along comes the 'he did it alone anyway' group that cannot explain away the logic of head on shooting where you can actually see the results of your effort.
What logic is there here?
You can see the result with “head on shooting”? Where the shooter has to see through:
* the windshield is within 8 feet of JFK.
* the first row of passengers, within 6 feet of JFK
* the second row of passengers, within 3 feet of JFK
And if the shooter is able to see the results of the shooting, he is liable to see that he missed his shot because the windshield deflected the bullet. Only as deflection of 5 degrees is enough to turn an accurate shot into a miss of five inches. And seeing the target for a second shot is going to be even more difficult because of the now splintered windshield glass.
In order to see JFK. In contrast, shooting from behind:
* minimizes the odds the forward-facing passengers and Secret Service agents will see the shooter,
* Has no windshield within 12 feet or more of JFK in the way.
* Has no person within 18 feet of JFK.
So, I must confess that I still fail to see the logic of using a head on shooter.
Instead they claim lucky shots or show off shots and any other drivel that insults the intelligence. The government case against Oswald was itself based upon a ton load of lies. That skeptics like myself refuse to accept that crap is prudent but don't expect so called reasonable people to take me seriously.
I don’t see the need to claim lucky shots. Oswald was trained to shoot accurately with a rifle, using iron sights, without a scope, at targets at 200, 300 and 500 yards away, using either a standing, kneeling or lying down position. I don’t see any need for luck to hit a target that at its furthest was 88 yards away. What Oswald needed was better judgement not to attempt that first shot when the target’s angular velocity was 4.8 degrees per second.
And, by the say, you should not call yourself a “skeptic”. True skeptics do not believe in Large-Secret-Enduring conspiracy theories. Such conspiracies are deemed too unlikely to be true. This has been a constant with true skeptics for over two centuries. Even if you are right, there was, somehow a Large-Secret-Conspiracy, for once, that really did exist, you should not call yourself a skeptic. First...prove you are reasonable.
I think you need to first prove that you are reasonable.
By the way, what gets lost in this blizzard of posts the answer to the original question of this thread:
Can anybody provide proof of a successful reenactment of Oswald’s feat? Yes, the shooting has been successfully duplicated. Not at Dealey Plaza, where legal tests with fired rounds is extremely difficult to get permission for, being an urban environment, and never at a moving target, but at a near be rural location. This can be seen in a TV show shown about 13 years ago:
Discovery Channel: Unsolved History - JFK Conspiracy Where Michael Yardley fired at a towed car moving at 10 mph at angles similar to those at Dealey Plaza. If anything, at more difficult angles than Oswald had.
He fired 16 shots and all hit a head size target.
The one difficulty he had was the rifle jammed in 4 of the tests attempting a series of 3 aimed shots. But did not jam in 3 of these attempts, resulting in 9 of 9 hits.
But of course, Yardley did not spend a lot of time practicing smoothly working the bolt of a Carcano rifle, without firing, as Oswald could have done. And was said to have done, according to his wife before the Warren Commission. So, Oswald’s odds of avoiding a jam might have been better than 3 in 7.
In any case, firing accurate shots with a Carcano rifle at a moving target within 100 yards? Not a problem.