Originally Posted by golfbulldog
|
The bits that confuse me are the descriptions of the straight/angled line delivery paths as being "cross line" procedures and.. the circle delivery path as "on-line"
I have always thought that :-
-online procedure means swing (arc of apporach) and
- cross line procedure mean hit (angle of approach)
So i get a few questions in my head
- Does that mean that a swinger needs/requires a circle delivery path??
I do not think so ...
- does that mean that if a swinger uses a straight line delivery path then it is a cross line procedure and they can use the angle of approach?
not sure...
- Now if i am aiming for a later release/more snap than sweep....I think i have to use a straight line delivery path ( not circle...circle path can not do snap release...right?).....
so what options does my right forearm have for covering or tracing?
I think that it can always trace the geometric plane line...but as I am now using a cross line procedure ...does that mean "out to right field" ( ie. more 10-5-E rather than 10-5-A...but that sounds too much like hitting!!!)
You can feel my confusion by now...i assume that some of my original assumptions are incorrect ...hence my confusion! Just not sure which bit of the puzzle is incorrect
- Is there a swinger's visual equivalent for the right forearm in a straight line delivery snap release??
A few worked examples may help my fog problem
Now add in the slide of the hips parallel to whatever and does that mean that a swinger slides his hips differently in a crcle delivery path as opposed to a straight line delivery path???
I have ignored this issue for nearly 2 years...grasping the words rather than the real meaning... time has come to lance this boil!
|
I'm back, POR (pressing on regardless).
You are a swinger. You're probably going to use a single shift or zero shift up to Turned Shoulder Plane and then execute the downswing with a parallel hip slide driving the right shoulder down that plane, incidentally establishing axis tilt. Therefore your hands will take a straight line or top arc and straight line delivery path directly to the inside-aft aiming point for #3 pressure point, not a circle delivery path.
As an alternative, you might be dropping the hands straight down to the elbow plane first. Probably not, but in any case it's still a straight line path and not a circle delivery path.
(The circle path is mandatory for all non-pivot strokes, hitting or swinging. The axis tilt allows a line delivery path but does not require it.)
But what will the right forearm and clubhead do?
The short answer is "follow the hands". But we need to discern a delivery line and adjust it if necessary.
That's where Visual Equivalents come in, 2-J-3.
The true geometric plane line is the Basic Delivery Line.
Tracing the true plane line with the right forefinger is equivalent to directing the #3 pressure point on a mentally constructed straight line from the Top of the line to the ball.
Visual equivalents are seen on the ground by the golfer as either the clubhead following an Arc of Approach through the inside-aft point on the ball, out to Low Point Plane Line and then back in again across the Impact Plane Line, or the clubhead covering a straight line Angle of Approach on the ground and out to right field, never coming back to the original impact plane line.
The latter changes the physics of impact which just arbitrarily requires a 10-5-E closed plane line with a steeper plane angle to agree with the new clubshaft motions. The right forearm traces that delivery line but the clubhead visually covers it.
The angle of the Angle of Approach line can be determined as being parallel to the angle of the right forearm at impact fix.
While these visual equivalents are interchangeable, the Arc is most compatible with the on-line swing and the Line with the cross-line Hit. Hitters can choose either, swingers probably would not choose Line. An Angle of Approach line requires any "bump" to be parallel to the 10-5-E new plane line.
The confusion arises because of calling the hands' delivery path "Line" or "Circle" and also referring to the Angle of Approach as "Line" as opposed to "Arc" in delivery lines. They're not the same "Line" between delivery PATH and delivery LINE.