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His break-through was identifying the role of the pp3 and/or forearm in controlling the overall motion and the constraints that are required to allow that to occur. To me, TGM is focusing on these elements...the physics is taken for granted. |
Golf For the Course, Not the Lab
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:salut: |
Yoda - you wrote-: "The Pivot Delivers the Bent Right Elbow into Release.---
The Straightening Right Elbow Delivers the Left Arm and Club into Impact and Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position)." You don't state whether the right elbow straightening is an active or a passive phenomenon. It is my understanding, from reading the TGM book, that in a swinger's action, the pivot delivers the entire power package assembly intact to the delivery position, and that release of the power package then happens due to the following phenomenon. When the downswing pivot action subsides in the mid downswing, the left arm is catapulted off the chest (via the pivot-activated release of power accumulator #4) and therefore the left arm is moving towards the target with enough momentum to reach, and pass, the impact position. The right elbow then straightens passively in this scenario, with no need for any isotonic right triceps muscle action. The right triceps only has to have enough isometric tone to allow the right forearm to be driven forward so that it keeps up with the left arm, and simultaneously maintains extensor action throughout the entire downswing. Does my description represent your understanding of a swinger's action? In the Tom Tomasello video tapes, he talks of the two forearms pulling the entire power package down to waist level while the body clears out of the way. He then states that the "right arm hits the ball", which seemingly implies that the right elbow straightening action is an active action. Therefore, Tom Tomasello is apparently describing a 4-barrel swing action activated by the right arm throw action - in the following sequence 4, 1,2,3. Power accumulator #4 is released by the "two forearms" pulling the entire power package downwards and thereby simultaneously propelling the left arm forward (while the pivot action simply allows the body to get out of the way), and then the right elbow straightens actively releasing power accumulator #1. Is that how you understand the TT right arm swing action that DG recommends? Why would DG believe that TT's right arm swing action is preferable to the standard pivot-driven triple barrel swing action (4,2,3)? Jeff. |
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Is it superior? Well Ben Hogan did it so there is the answer right there. Now i can understand why TT was considered controversial but really the genius is there for all to see:salut: |
The Semi-Passive Right Arm
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He will respond. Promise! :laughing9 |
Yoda - I don't understand this statement.
"Once the Right Shoulder has Delivered the Power Package to Release, the Right Elbow must straighten, and the Left Arm and Club is driven by that action. Otherwise, nothing moves!" You seem to be implying that the straightening right arm actively drives the left arm and club in a swinger's action. I thought that the downswing pivot action catapults the left arm away from the torso when the downswing pivot action subsides and that the left arm continues to move targetwards because of the momentum gained from this catapulting force. I therefore presume that the right arm straightens passively because the right hand is conjoined to the left hand at the grip end of the club, and the right hand must move as fast as the left hand. In other words, I do not perceive that the straightening right arm is actively driving the left arm and club in a swinger's action, but merely "keeping pace" (= having enough active muscle contractile force to move the right hand at the same speed as the left hand). Am I wrong? You are right! A lot of my understanding of HK's writing comes from other sources - primarily from your archived posts. You have a great explicatory gift when it comes to making HK's obtuse prose more readily understandable. Jeff. |
Pistol
I have viewed TT describing the right hand karate chop motion in that video. Do you interpret his description of that action differently to the description that I have already proffered with respect to my personal interpretation of TT's right arm throw action swing? Are you implying that Ben Hogan used an active right arm throw action and/or an active right elbow straightening action in his full swing? If "yes" - could you please provide the "evidence" so that I can better understand why you believe those facts. Jeff. |
To throw a ball
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywrD8LjIE4k It is all about the pivot…(or the dress code):laughing9 |
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Evidence lets see what did Hogan say "i wish i had 3 right hands" and any video or photo will never tell you what really happens |
New Perspectives
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"Once the Right Shoulder has Delivered the Power Package to Release, the Right Elbow must straighten. That motion permits the [Swinger's] Left Arm and Club to continue its centrifugally-driven journey into Impact. Otherwise, nothing moves!" I like this second versio0n better because it differentiates action (actively doing work) from motion (passively permitting other things to occur). For further clarification of Right Elbow participation Through the Ball (7-24), study 6-A-1 (the straightening Right Arm changing the shape of the Power Package Triangle); 7-20 (the lengthening Right Arm Triggering the Release); and 6-B-3-0 (Hand Motion "'Roll Power Control'" of the Right Elbow and "true Clubhead Overtaking Control"). :) |
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