Sounds like Angled Hinging. Hitters, by the way, often set up with the Clubface somewhat CLOSED. If the ball is coming off SQUARE at SEPARATION, AND THE PLANE LINE IS STRAIGHT, WITH CLUB ON PLANE, the ball should take off STRAIGHT, AND PROBABLY FADE A LITTLE.
lagster ,help me here, if the clubface is closed 2 degrees AT IMPACT,and is square at seperation I assumed it must be opening. If "a good plane " is what I consider to be inside aft quadrant FROM A SQUARE/ SQUARE setup, surely this is vertical hingeing?. I find it difficult to feel what is being described -it is the "closed at impact square at seperation'bit which is getting me
lagster ,help me here, if the clubface is closed 2 degrees AT IMPACT,and is square at seperation I assumed it must be opening. If "a good plane " is what I consider to be inside aft quadrant FROM A SQUARE/ SQUARE setup, surely this is vertical hingeing?. I find it difficult to feel what is being described -it is the "closed at impact square at seperation'bit which is getting me
thanks fella's. So in conclusion you feel that the ball will move left to right in the air? I am not sure because the face was closed at impact and there is some research being done on this at the moment. A more normal situation would be the person who arrives at impact with an open face and during impact the face is closing while the ball is on it.
Another one for you. How do golf machine instructors teach ball below/ ball above the feet? The lie of the club/face tilt seems to be a big factor to me.
thanks in advance
Gordon Morrison
thanks fella's. So in conclusion you feel that the ball will move left to right in the air? I am not sure because the face was closed at impact and there is some research being done on this at the moment. A more normal situation would be the person who arrives at impact with an open face and during impact the face is closing while the ball is on it.
Another one for you. How do golf machine instructors teach ball below/ ball above the feet? The lie of the club/face tilt seems to be a big factor to me.
thanks in advance
Gordon Morrison
The more lofted the club the more directional deviation for uphill (going left)or downhill(going right)lies.
thanks fella's. So in conclusion you feel that the ball will move left to right in the air? I am not sure because the face was closed at impact and there is some research being done on this at the moment. A more normal situation would be the person who arrives at impact with an open face and during impact the face is closing while the ball is on it.
Another one for you. How do golf machine instructors teach ball below/ ball above the feet? The lie of the club/face tilt seems to be a big factor to me.
thanks in advance
Gordon Morrison
It is necessary to reorientate the sweet spot by lowering the hands on downhill lies and raising them on uphill lies. i.e shallow the clubshaft angle for downhill and steepen it for uphill. That, along with other standard set up adjustments, will get the job done nicely.
Not sure i agree IB. If you lower your hands when the ball is already below your feet it raises the toe even more off the ground and renders the toe and sweetspot almost unusable and vice versa on ball above. Are you trying to get the sole of the club in a more normal position in relation to the slope i.e flatter?
Explain more