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:Psychobabble, you are correct about bloodstain analysts using straight lines to approximate the path of the bloodstain trajectories. This is called the tangential method. An analyst tries to use fast upward moving stains whose flight path has had little or no effect due to gravity. The resulting area of convergence will always have a height greater than or equal to the event. There are computer programs like HemoSpat that do the calculations through digital imagery and on-scene measurements so the analsyt doesn't have to use real strings. As for the tone of the article, I tried to cover what I could at the time and I'm sorry for not getting back to tidy things up. I will look at making it more encyclopedia-like. [[User:Kevin Maloney|Kevin Maloney]] 14:12, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
::Thankyou. [[User:Psychobabble|Psychobabble]] 21:49, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
MVIS and HVIS?
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