*lost* you're sounding like your own cult.
The difference of V vs. W in Hebrew is about a couple of thousand years of living and evolving through the generations.
Latin also had the W consonantal sound and the vowel sound U and were both written V. With time in the Romance languages the consonantal W sound became a consonantal V sound like in English. In Spanish this V sound became a soft B, and today there's no difference between V and B in Spanish. I'm using these other languages to show sound development. In the Germanic language group to which English belongs, the W is mostly pronounced as a V in English not like English W.
So what about Hebrew? The ancient Hebrew Wau became Vav overtime.
The whole YHWH vs. YHVH is a discussion based mostly on ignorance of how Hebrew phonetics changed over time.
Why not also discuss the Y vs. J issue? :-)))
Did you ever see Indiana Jones jumping on the J and almost killing himself when he was spelling "God's Name"?
In Latin the name is spelled with an I.
:-)))