Initially I had a serious problem mixing vertical and horizontal hinge. Let's say you'd be assingned the task of mouting a small door for the dog to be able to enter and exit the house. You'd call the owner and ask him whether he wanted the hinges vertical or horizontal. Might be a language thang, but I tend to think that most people wanting the hinges along the top frame of the door post would say: Mount them horizontally.
- You mean "horizontal hinge"?
- Yes!
- I.e. same as "vertical hinge" in TGM?
- Waitaminute....
I can easily live with it, but I sometimes find it confusing.
how i remember it is that HK was talking about Hinge Action which is perpendicular to the mounting of the Hinge Pin.
how i remember it is that HK was talking about Hinge Action which is perpendicular to the mounting of the Hinge Pin.
Thanks. Good enough.
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When James Durham recorded 94 at the Old Course at St Andrews in 1767, he set a course record that lasted 86 years. Golf: A curious sport whose object is to put a very small ball in a very small hole with implements ill desiged for the purpose - Sir Winston Churchill
I believe that the hinge action is not just a concept of through the ball (impact to followthrough) but also the motion of the entire left arm through the entire stroke (I would love Lynns input on this to know if I'm correct on this). Looking at the structure of the flail in 2k and when that flail is attached to the hinge arrangement in 1-L - the back of the upper arm stays flat on the hinge as the forearm or swivel goes from its vertical condition to a turned condition yet the upper arm is still vertical to its hinge action plane - on the downstroke you turn the hand back to its vertical condition for impact to align the clubface back to its impact condition and the motion of the entire left arm that hits the ball as if it where one big hockey stick...lol. Another reason I think this is because it is a component meaning it is 'a part' of a mechanical complex.