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Kinetic link

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  #1  
Old 10-25-2008, 08:02 PM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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Kinetic link
I am interested in your opinion as to which of these two graphs represent the "correct" body sequencing in a body swinger.

Graph 1



Graph 2



The first graph is the result of research by the TPI researchers and they claim that the arms/shoulders/pelvis rotate at roughly the same angular speed in the early downswing (before the end of the early downswing = lead arm parallel to the ground) in an excellent golfer. By contrast, the second graph implies that the hips rotate well before the shoulders and that the shoulders only start to rotate when the pelvis has reached about 50% of its maximum angular velocity. This graph also claims that the shoulders have roughly equal speed to the pelvis when the pelvis reaches its maximum angular speed. A third implication of the second graph is that the degree of torso-pelvis separation increases in the early downswing - because the pelvis is rotating while the shoulders are not rotating. This is in contrast to the TPI researchers result. Here is another graph from the TPI researchers - who have used high resolution (6-degrees of freedom) motion sensors (at 200 frames/second) to resolve exactly what happens in the early downswing.



This graph shows that the shoulders are actually moving at a faster rotational speed than the pelvis in the early downswing, which means that the degree of torso-pelvic separation must be progressively decreasing in the early downswing.

So - which graph depicts "true" reality for an excellent body swinger?

Jeff.
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  #2  
Old 10-26-2008, 01:22 AM
biomechanic biomechanic is offline
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Now isn't this funny, on iseek here you are prononcing yourself an exbert and here your showing you clearly don't know what your talking about asking for advice.
Isn't it funny another company backs and produce the same graph as we do, but then T.P.I argue different, but then again T.P.I six dof system is inacurate.
If two companies are producing the same chain wouldn't that indicate maybe T.P.I are wrong, if two research companies who have been in the game for years provide graph maybe T.P.I are wrong.
Your misinterpreting the graphs, they aren't saying the shoulders aren't moving all it's saying is the hip start first,then shoulders follow.
but this what happen unless your trained in how to correctly understand and read the graphs you develop the wrong perception of what they mean like you do, in order to understand these graphs, you need to have studied biomechanics and been trained

Last edited by biomechanic : 10-26-2008 at 01:27 AM.
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  #3  
Old 10-26-2008, 02:18 AM
pistol pistol is offline
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Originally Posted by biomechanic View Post
Now isn't this funny, on iseek here you are prononcing yourself an exbert and here your showing you clearly don't know what your talking about asking for advice.
Isn't it funny another company backs and produce the same graph as we do, but then T.P.I argue different, but then again T.P.I six dof system is inacurate.
If two companies are producing the same chain wouldn't that indicate maybe T.P.I are wrong, if two research companies who have been in the game for years provide graph maybe T.P.I are wrong.
Your misinterpreting the graphs, they aren't saying the shoulders aren't moving all it's saying is the hip start first,then shoulders follow.
but this what happen unless your trained in how to correctly understand and read the graphs you develop the wrong perception of what they mean like you do, in order to understand these graphs, you need to have studied biomechanics and been trained
Well well well ...this is going to be good..front row seats anyone

Last edited by pistol : 10-26-2008 at 02:40 AM.
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  #4  
Old 10-26-2008, 06:26 AM
neil neil is offline
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I'm not a biomechanic,but I can read a graph.
All I see is that all the components are moving all the time in the -hips shoulders- arms- club- sequence.
Or am I missing something?
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neil k
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  #5  
Old 10-26-2008, 09:41 AM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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Biomechanic

I am not asking for advice. I have my own evidence-supported opinions on which graph is likely to be more accurate. I am merely asking for alternative opinions.

If someone, like you, has an opinion that the TPI graph is inaccurate and that it doesn't represent reality in a body swinger, then that person is free to provide an explanation as to why the TPI graph is inaccurate. I personally have substantial reasons to believe that the TPI graph more closely represents "true" reality.

Jeff.
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  #6  
Old 10-26-2008, 09:48 AM
pistol pistol is offline
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Originally Posted by Jeff View Post
Biomechanic

I am not asking for advice. I have my own evidence-supported opinions on which graph is likely to be more accurate. I am merely asking for alternative opinions.

If someone, like you, has an opinion that the TPI graph is inaccurate and that it doesn't represent reality in a body swinger, then that person is free to provide an explanation as to why the TPI graph is inaccurate. I personally have substantial reasons to believe that the TPI graph more closely represents "true" reality.

Jeff.
Jeff the first graph is TPI and you have evidence its accurate. What and where does this evidence come from?

The second graph is Kinetic Link..umm where did you get that graph from and how old is that graph?
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