D thanks for the info on the radiused soles. I hadnt seen that, it makes good sense. TSP lives I guess for some.
But this fella you show here. That is a very steep plane he is on. You dont show him at impact exactly or at Top to see where his right shoulder is. To my eye he looks more like:
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Quote:
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10-6-C SQUARED SHOULDER. The reference point for this Plane Angle is the point occupied by the Right Shoulder (or Left-- for Putting) at Address. With this Steep Plane, Angled Hinge Action becomes almost Vertical Hinge Action (2-D). Accumulator #3 can be zeroed out.
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Zeroing out #3 , Vertical Hinging, I hope this fellow has bent his lie angles up a few degrees. Do you think he started on this plane, 10-7-A Zero Shift or did he start on the Elbow Plane then shift to the TSP and leave it there. 10-7-B Single Shift.
I prefer a lower plane angle for impact myself. Homer said we generally use the Elbow Plane almost totally subconsciously which to me implies that it is very "natural", if you will. Im assuming the Right Elbow to be on the clubs shaft plane, lie angle, which isnt necessarily the case.
http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/a...d=125841663 5
http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/a...d=125841663 5