This picture is even crappier than that lips movie...

- crappy pic.png (1.69 KiB) Viewed 6049 times
...but
- The movie is low resolution.
- It's not known where the mouthpiece was drilled to insert the tiny camera. The ideal angle would be just below center (as most trumpet players play "down-stream", but that spot would interfere with the throat).
- The higher the pitch, the tinier the space between the lips (just as with the epic difference between oboe double reed and bassoon double reed openings). With trumpet playing, the arc becomes - again - just about microscopic, and the blurry movie is anything-but at the microscopic level, and nor (from what I've seen) is it pointed straight on at the nearly-microscopic space between the lips...so there's really nothing to be seen that demonstrates anything for certain.
- As you (finally) admit that you "can't guarantee that lips would close in that case" (as I contend that closing them would stop the vibration), why would they necessarily close at higher frequencies - such as a tuba player "squealing" out pitches way up at the top of the treble clef staff and above?
Why would a higher frequency range necessarily create an allowance or an exception?
summary:
- crappy low-res micro-camera movie
- unknown filming angle (which could well not reveal the opening, due to where the hole is trilled and how the mouthpiece is "clocked")
- admission that lips could possibly vibrate without touching each other
- as lips (and oboe reed blades vs. bassoon reed blades) become infinitely closer to each other (as the frequency increases) they can certainly become closer-and-closer to each other, YET never actually touch (at the tinier-and-tinier spot where they continue to vibrate at higher and higher frequencies).
One of you just loves charts and graphs. Here's a graph showing an arc whereby the arc creeps infinitely closer to nothing, YET never reaches nothing:
(something I was shown in elementary school)
Seriously, you two guys are pm-ing each other and coordinating your trolls, yes?
Also:
I've heard that people who deal in "engineering" and "science" stuff - who encounter others who disagree with their observations - often embrace a hobby of (regardless of what actually is - which isn't the point) attempting to demonstrate that those - who disagree with their findings - are foolish or stupid...(again: a whole bunch like the totalitarian/equal distribution/keynesian -vs- libertarian/free-market/hayekian arguments on social media). I'll
READILY ADMIT that I am both foolish
AND stupid, if that's what y'all are attempting to pull off.
