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Old 12-11-2012, 04:39 PM
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BerntR BerntR is offline
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Originally Posted by MizunoJoe View Post
There is a distinction between the 3-d path the hands move through and where the line between PP#3 and the Sweetspot is tracing. For example in the Turning Shoulder Case(pg 156 - 6th ed) - the Arms hang at Address and take over the vertical element--pointing at and along a line on the ground parallel to the Target Line(not on it). So the hand path and sweet spot don't have to move toward a common plane.

Yes he did - the pressure he felt at PP#3 was lag pressure - a "receiving" pressure. He was pulling all the way in what Morad calls a "cp" swing, in which the lag pressure is felt to pull toward the body mass center. Notice how bent his right arm is through Impact. Donald uses the Morad and TGM "cf" Swing, in which the hands are thrown away from the flywheel - the Right Shoulder. His head raises up to counterbalance the hands moving away.
You need a crash course in physics. The only way to produce and maintain different hand path and ch path is to apply force across the shaft. But you say Hogan was only pulling. And moving hands and ch on entirely different planes through impact. It doesn't add up.
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Old 12-11-2012, 07:40 PM
MizunoJoe MizunoJoe is offline
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Originally Posted by BerntR View Post
You need a crash course in physics. The only way to produce and maintain different hand path and ch path is to apply force across the shaft. But you say Hogan was only pulling. And moving hands and ch on entirely different planes through impact. It doesn't add up.
Crash-bang: Applying FATS in a Swing is OK as long as it isn't applied in the wrong place on the shaft. In fact, all Swings require it or the Pivot couldn't move the club. You're mistakenly thinking that pulling just means pulling longitudinally on the shaft.

When Hogan "slots" the shaft, the hand pressure is downward and perpendicular to the plane of the left wrist. He flattens the shaft and whirls through impact, keeping his hands moving in an ever tightening curved path around his body rather than letting the pivot throw them away from the body down the line as in a cf Swing.
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Old 12-11-2012, 09:58 PM
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BerntR BerntR is offline
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Originally Posted by MizunoJoe View Post
Crash-bang: Applying FATS in a Swing is OK as long as it isn't applied in the wrong place on the shaft. In fact, all Swings require it or the Pivot couldn't move the club. You're mistakenly thinking that pulling just means pulling longitudinally on the shaft.
Yes, I am "mistakenly" thinking that pulling means just pulling.

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