if you want to do karate chop.. make sure the #p 3 is above aft of the shaft so that pp3 will always trace down plane. and the extensor action pulls the Club instead of the thumb or arms.. slightly different which will facilitate pitch elbow ; On plane motion..
A few months ago i was asking alot about pp3 rotation and its effect/cause on downswing...
Thanks for this insight... you think that a swinger needs to keep pp3 in its quarter turn rotated position into downswing to delay the release?
Does this give you a different style of aiming point feel? pp3 points away from aiming point whilst travelling in space towards aiming point??? whereas the aft position allows pp3 to point and travel in ame direction towards aiming point????
A few months ago i was asking alot about pp3 rotation and its effect/cause on downswing...
Thanks for this insight... you think that a swinger needs to keep pp3 in its quarter turn rotated position into downswing to delay the release? Nothing to do with this
Does this give you a different style of aiming point feel? pp3 points away from aiming point whilst travelling in space towards aiming point??? whereas the aft position allows pp3 to point and travel in ame direction towards aiming point???? Nothing to do with that, aim PP3 towards wherever need to be aimed, pasively or actively
Thanks for your help
Why PP3 is different with Hit and swing? because swing uses a sequential release. Caused by CF or CP , and swing mechanic uses a Equal and Opposite reaction, a key to understanding how a swing works.
the palm is always parrallel to the plane unless at switchover. If the PP is not on the top , we won't be able to trace PP3 along the plane.
The proper late release is Will yield a proper loading of Presure point 4 1 2 3 during downswing and sequential release. .But accumulator No. 1 , the elbow will release the very late for a late release..I don't know how to really put them in words, you need an AI for this .
__________________
God :God is love.
Latest incubator: Finally appreciate why Hogan wrote 19 pages on GRIP. I bet he could write another 40 pages.