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Re: plane of right forearm
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Thank you Matt, The pictures clear up a lot of confusion. Would you entertain the thought of explaining the different hinge action with pictures ? |
Re: plane of right forearm
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Matthew~
Thanks for the photo and discussion. Hopefully my measurements are close enough and I am not being too precise but here are some observations of the photo positions and a question. Would appreciate your comments or clarification from a zero shift perspective. 1 (O)-A line drawn through the two hand positions to the ground does not intersect the plane line. 2 (O)-The hands at address are below the TSP. 3 (O)-Considering the sweet spot plane and the address shaft plane both pass through the "hands/PP3" and assuming the right forearm rests on the appropriate plane, that plane is flatter than the TSP. Or, the right shoulder turns to a point that is not on the "preselected plane" (ref. 10-13-D). 4(?)-In the downstroke, do the hands return to the address position or move down the TSP? DRW |
Comparing Professional down the line views
I have been comparing some down the line views of several pro players on the Redgoat smugmug site and have some observations and questions.
I did not look at all the players but I didn't find any who started with the shaft in line with their right forearm, not even Steve Elkington, unless I am misinterpreting the concept. However almost all of them had the shaft in line with the right forearm at or near impact. By starting with the shaft and forearm on plane and tracing the plane with PP 3 am I then eliminating extra moves or shifts to get to proper impact? Steve |
Re: Comparing Professional down the line views
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Gentlemen,
The difference is ... Adjusted Address vs. Impact Fix...If you set up Impact Fix you are setting the right forearm and clubshaft on-plane with each other...If you move the hands back to adjusted address or a MID-BODY LOCATION you will see a difference in the relationship of the clubshaft to the right forearm ... Try it , See it, Do it Again and Again!!! Food for Thought.... Hittin' Machine Set-up...Impact Fix Swingin' Machine Set-up ... Adjusted Address Suggested Reading last sentence of 10-9-A, 10-9-B "These are just merely "useful" not "have to" To know the book...Is not just for reading the Book...Rather it is to do what is in the book...DO THE BOOK!!! Annikan |
Re: Comparing Professional down the line views
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I have had instructors tell to "just let the hands drop from the top". They didn't tell me how or why. Maybe that's what they we're talking about. I'd rather KISS, and keep at the zero shift. YMMV. Charlie |
I am a little different as I set up for Swinging with "impact hand location" and my right forearm on plane.
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WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Wow talk about a defogger!!! All this time i thought the right forearm had to be on plane even for the mid body hands. So that means that both when hitting and swinging the right forearm starts offplane in the standard address position. If this is correct which it obviously must be then i think there are countless numbers among us that misunderstood.
As a footnote Homer actually states standard address a his preferred procedure for both hitting and swinging in chapter 12. He interestingly mentions 10-9-A Standard being "especially useful" for swinging and 10-9-B for the same hitting however. I wonder how close he was to using the Impact address in chapter 12? I'm still light headed from finally learning unless we start at impact address the right forearm will not be in line with the shaft. John |
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