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YodasLuke,
With 10-5-E and the steeper Plane causing the Clubshaft to be almost vertical at the Top do you find the loading of #3 PP feels different than when using 10-5-A? Also, I just wanted to say that your posts here in the Hitters forum are a great help. They really help to give me an understanding of the mechanics and feels of the Hitting Stroke. Thanks again. Greg |
Puzzle Complete
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By jove, I think you've got it! :salut: |
handing it down
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The feel of the #3 is different for each. When the club is on a steeper Plane, it feels lighter. |
Tag Team
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Homer Kelley left The Golfing Machine to us in his written and recorded words. The torch is there. For those who would pass it... And accept it... The legacy lives on. :salut: |
More Questions
Been listening to the recordings, reading the book and the posts here. Still some confusion.
Let me start with that I do understand ( I think) the different procedures - Feelwise. But the geometrical/mechanical aspects are disturbing me. And I wonder if Homer, unintentionally, mixed mechanics and feelings in chapter 2. So please comment my thinking. Quote:
It took some re-readings to see that Yoda higtlighted clubhead and not clubshaft. If I trace with my right forearm the Geometric Plane line ( A straight Line ) - The clubhead will cover the Arc of Approach, so the blur makes an arc also, With my right forearm tracing the Angle of Approach ( which also is a straight line) - the clubhead will cover the Angle of Approach. And here comes my thoughts of Mr. K´s mixing. The feel should be that the clubhead blurs in a straight line, but the blur is in fact making an arc since we have an inclined plane. The only time the blur does not make an arc and moves in a straight line is if the plane is striktly vertical. or am I totally wrong here? |
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The Angle of Approach can be located . . . but Homer said it doesn't really matter HOW MUCH or HOW LITTLE you GO OUT . . . just GO OUT ON AS STRAIGHT OF A LINE AS POSSIBLE. Homer said that the Angle of Approach procedure would accomodate varying degrees of OUT just as well. Dude you understand this . . . you gotta put it in the incubator and just let it simmer. Leave it alone and come back. You got it thought dude. You just don't think you got it. |
My way
When I play I'll take a couple of practice swings (hits) tracing the planeline (with RF and PP3). I'll watch the direction of the clubhead into impactposition.
Then when I hit the ball I'll abandon the feel of tracing the planeline. Instead I'll hit down on the ball, out in the direction of the clubhead seen in the practice swings. That's it - is that it? All kinds of stuff goes wrong sometimes: ie. when I want to hit it too hard and runs out of right arm, or when the feeling of wanting to hit forward gets too big, or when I take the club too far back and turns the hands and suddenly needs to swivel/roll back into impact........etc But on most days, this is sooooo simple. Just trust it, and hit it long and straight. |
looking down plane
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He said you can't have an Angle of Approach to an Angle of Approach procedure. In Ted's words, you can't have a visual equivalent, since what you're seeing and what you're doing are one in the same. |
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A follow up. You have said that you sometimes change between 10-5-A and 10-5-E. Do you when using 10-5-A you trace Angle of Approach and when using 10-5-E trace the Geometrical Plane Line with your right forearm? |
Geometric Plane Line is GONE
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Here's some more info, hopefully it won't be confusing. These are, thanks to Ted, the words of Homer, "The original plane is gone - don't even think about it. It's totally replaced." Remember that, when using Angle of Approach. You can't trace something that's gone. The Clubhead COVERS the 10-5-E Plane Line and is also TRACED by the Right Forearm and #3 PP. Per 5-0, "... the Delivery Lines, in addition, must be 'Traced' by the Right Forearm." Remember, when using Angle of Approach Procedure, you're NOT using 10-5-E as a new Plane, you're just using its baseline as a guideline for the Clubhead. The visually equivalent Delivery Line, the Angle of Approach, always exists then using 10-5-A but unless you choose to, you're not necessarily covering it with the Clubhead. Also, per 5-0, " The Plane Line - being the basic- can substitute for any of its "Visual Equivalents' at any time." Angle of Approach and Arc of Approach are "Visual Equivalents" to the True Geometric Plane Line. Pick one of three and that's the one you Trace. A quote from Yoda: "Again, the Right Forearm always traces the selected Delivery Line. Then, depending on the procedure being used, the Sweetspot covers either the Arc of Approach or the Angle of Approach." Hopefully that helps. It helps me to be sure to think about the three Delivery Lines seperately. Each one is used indepedently of the others to deliver the Clubhead. |
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