Thank you. I suspected something like this would explain why the first batch of three shots sounds different.
However, I don't think this explains how any of the shots would fall out of sync as they seem to when the waveforms are lined up, unless the person recording was somehow able to move 50-100 feet in the span of a few seconds. The existing video does not seem to indicate that happening.
When he compares the different audios, you see TWO TIMELINES. He's not actually comparing two waveforms here. He is comparing two SCREENSHOTS of waveforms.
OMG. OK. The different phones is minor minor issue compared to this.
19 minutes in he claims he has evidence of two gunman. And his argument is the shots sound different
But look at the video. The reason shots sound different is right in the video.
The camera is not stationary which means the microphone is moving. And even more important what is in front of the microphone is moving.
The guy taking the video does a full 180 in the shot.
This changes the relationship of the microphone to the gun
So the video begins the alignment is
microphone then body then gun
Sound is coming from the back through his body to the mic.
However, for the later shots the guy holding the phone completely turns around And is now facing the shooter. So the alignment is
Body microphone gun
Sound is coming unimpeded directly into the microphone.
The first three shots have have his body between the microphone and the gun and the last shots don't. This changes the sound quality.
Again, this is not an Apple to oranges comparison.
Thank you. I suspected something like this would explain why the first batch of three shots sounds different.
However, I don't think this explains how any of the shots would fall out of sync as they seem to when the waveforms are lined up, unless the person recording was somehow able to move 50-100 feet in the span of a few seconds. The existing video does not seem to indicate that happening.
What time in the video?
Starts at about 24 minutes
He is usuing Audacity to compare waveforms.
But look at the Audacity menu and see how it handles multi track editing.
https://manual.audacityteam.org/man/tutorial_using_multi_track.html
You have one timeline and multiple audio tracks.
This is not what his video shows.
When he compares the different audios, you see TWO TIMELINES. He's not actually comparing two waveforms here. He is comparing two SCREENSHOTS of waveforms.