I am just thinking and developing ideas. I need guys like you, Martee, to help me refine. This is exactly what I was hoping for, and why I post. For help because I sure need it.
Here it is modified: Basic motion swinging - Use accumulator #4 to move pressure points #2 and #3 with the law of the flail. Basic motion hitting - Use accumulator #1 to move pressure points #2 and #3 with the law of the flail. Then the pressure points move the golf club.
The real key (for me) is no hand accumulators. Just allow the arm power accumulators to move the pressure points.
It is just alot different for me than banging balls (before I found The Golfing Machine). Trying to just 'find it' hoping that improvement would gradually come. This is similar to the tournament chess player who is able to play well even though he is not utilizing a plan during his matches. Sure there was some improvement, but that would tend to slow and hit big brick walls often.
This stuff is probably already ingrained into your head...and swing, but for me it is just all starting to come together.
I think the big thing for me is that I can use the law of the flail to apply good leverage with any length stroke. I just never got it like that before. I was unable to allow the primary lever assembly flail at stage 1. Now I can. I know many of you probably say 'yeah, so what', but for me, and maybe some other members (who have not figured this out) this is pretty big stuff. And I like it alot.
Very sharp Knight! Good Stuff!
Just one question- saw your Quote at the bottom of your post- Does Michael Hebron teach golf?
sorry this is way off topic, but I too used to play some tournament chess. I quit some time ago (8 years I think) and recently decided to start playing casually again. I bought Silmans book again (owned it years ago) in fact it currently sits on my nightstand just beneth TGM. It's just nice to see another chess loving golfing machine junkie out there. When I quit my rating was in the high 1400's, the strongest player I ever beat was rated around 1700. Unfortuantly playing chess is like golf; you have to practice to keep sharp and I am only a shadow of my former self. Just curious if you are/were rated?