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I'm gonna agree with mizunojoe here the only way to avoid c.f. is to move in a straight line effort which is possible with a right arm thrust the left arm being essentially useless it is simply a frozen bent right wrist floating from the top I love how a lot of u (u know who u are) want to quote the books physics and then at the same time you call homer wrong and claim u have all the latest scientific research to back it up.. . Figures just like all the pros out there who used Kellley's information and principles to make money and then go and discredit him after his death, classy...
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I have been thinking about releases and started to wonder on a couple of things. I can swing, with either hand or both. That is a swinging procedure. BUT I can not hit with either hand by itself. The left must be there to checkrein the thrusting right hand. and complete a primary lever assembly. There are 2 pressure points in operation at the same time- #1 thrusting the primary lever assembly and an ACTIVE #3 which also keeps the secondary assembly "moving right along" There are all manner of options. For any stroke length, the #1 thrust can be increased or decreased- #3 pressure should follow. For any #1 thrust, the stroke length can be adjusted. #3 should follow and be constant. But, there can be an background amount of cf and it can come from a pulling, can be generated from the pivot and is realy #4 accumulator. It is background and care must be taken not to damage the work of either #1 thrust or #3 activity. Like to hear your thoughts on this Daryl HB |
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I have a lot of swing to my hitting procedure. Lynn and Ted taught me the procedure . Starting with a lagging takeaway a rotated pressure point and drag loading. Just like they do it. That said even classic drive loading drives th primary lever and there is cf. it's just not employed in release to throw out. |
The right forearm is always driving but it is active or being driven by the swinging left arm
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I think of the primary lever as being like a swinging door . You push it closed with right arm thrust but it swings closed. With cf . The. Cf is in the door not the thrusting device.
In hitting we thrust the entire primary lever. But don't employ cf to initiate release of 2 or 3 . We use the muscular drive out of a right arm throw. The nature of the throw , the linear nature that is, changes with the location of bright elbow . Push vs punch vs pitch. Pitch and hiting perhaps being dangerously to active right arm pulling swinging. |
Great clarification, OB.
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[quote=O.B.Left;93261I have a lot of swing to my hitting procedure. Lynn and Ted taught me the procedure . Starting with a lagging takeaway a rotated pressure point and drag loading. Just like they do it.
That said even classic drive loading drives th primary lever and there is cf. it's just not employed in release to throw out.[/QUOTE] OB. ================================================== ====== OB, I will drag it back to your comment Some times good stuff just goes over everones head. Your loading make a lot of sense. I will not attempt to restate it here but it does conjure up an image: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wguFY...eature=related maybe even a practical one if U watch this video hb |
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Hitters stay "ahead of the Throwout". If the "Throwout" gets ahead, I would consider that to be unintentional. |
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