There has been an additional text to the second paragraph on
2-H in the 7th edition.
"The important thing is that the true Swing Center for ALL COMPONENTS is around a Hinge Pin with one end at the top of the Stationay Head and the other in the ground, precisely between the feet, with no regard for Body Location or Position at any time"
How do you read this? What does it mean for you?
What is your interpritation(?) of it?
__________________
Golf is an impossible game with impossible tools - Winston Churchill
There has been an additional text to the second paragraph on
2-H in the 7th edition.
"The important thing is that the true Swing Center for ALL COMPONENTS is around a Hinge Pin with one end at the top of the Stationay Head and the other in the ground, precisely between the feet, with no regard for Body Location or Position at any time"
How do you read this? What does it mean for you?
It means...
1. Set your head where you want it to be at Impact; then...
2. Leave it there until after the Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position) and into the Finish. In the interim, allow your Body (Hips and Shoulders) to move as necessary to Load, Deliver and support the On Plane Club.
1. Set your head where you want it to be at Impact; then...
2. Leave it there until after the Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position) and into the Finish. In the interim, allow your Body (Hips and Shoulders) to move as necessary to Load, Deliver and support the On Plane Club.
Although he writes that the stationary head is NOT mandatory,
this statement and your description makes it mandatory!
Could this not be the end of the debate?
__________________
Golf is an impossible game with impossible tools - Winston Churchill
I don't know where I got this, probably a little from a lot of places.
Stationary Head is stationary head, but that doesn't mean that it may not move. It is just not suppose to move on its own, initiate motion, etc. It can move by pivot motion IMO.
One must remember that golfers body must be taken into account, not all bodies have the flexibility to make shoulder turns and/or hip rotation and not cause other parts of the body to follow.
With a machine, the top point would be fixed unless an unbalance situation would arise. Then the machine would be redesigned to establish a proper balance for the motion to prevent the top from moving.
With the golfer's body, flexibility many limit pivot movement that can be performed prior to head movement. There must be a limit to the amount of acceptable movement, rule of thumb is it should not exceed movement past the right knee. Movement up and down or side to side on its own is unacceptable. If the movement of the head by the pivot is such that the to maintain body balance by other components, a problem is at hand IMO.
If you moved your head by x inches in any direction, are you able to move it back x inches?
All the time?
Per 1-L-1, "The Stationary Post (player's head) accurately returns the Clubhead through the ball (Centered Arc)"
With that, the Real Debate is...why wouldn't anyone want a centered arc?
Comdpa,
Let there be no mistake, I do understand the concept of Pivot Center.
The reason of my thread is that there has to be a reason why it is put in the 7th edition, and I have talked to other AI�s about the subject, and I have received different interpretations on this sentence.
You can read it as the hinge pin should be vertical during the hole swing or that the pin can tilt to one side or the other as long as the end in the ground do not move from it�s position, which is precisely between the feet. The mental picture I have in front of me is like a metronome.
How do you interpret it?
__________________
Golf is an impossible game with impossible tools - Winston Churchill
Let there be no mistake, I do understand the concept of Pivot Center.
The reason of my thread is that there has to be a reason why it is put in the 7th edition, and I have talked to other AI�s about the subject, and I have received different interpretations on this sentence.
You can read it as the hinge pin should be vertical during the hole swing or that the pin can tilt to one side or the other as long as the end in the ground do not move from it�s position, which is precisely between the feet. The mental picture I have in front of me is like a metronome.
How do you interpret it?
See 7-12 . . . I think that should clear up any interpretation issues. The title of the section is Swing Center TRIPOD. The head does't move, but what is UNDERNEATH it may. And in 1-L #1 it says STATIONARY Post (player's head). The post is IMAGINARY . . . It ain't the spine. It is a line drawn up between the feets and up through the mellon. Also see Axis Tilt in the Glossary . . .
Mechanical - To change directions, the helicopter pilot alters the plane of the rotating blades by tilting their axis in the new direction.
Golf - To change the plane of the Shoulder Turn without moving the Head, the golfer must tilt the Shoulder Axis by moving the Hips.
Let there be no mistake, I do understand the concept of Pivot Center.
The reason of my thread is that there has to be a reason why it is put in the 7th edition, and I have talked to other AI�s about the subject, and I have received different interpretations on this sentence.
You can read it as the hinge pin should be vertical during the hole swing or that the pin can tilt to one side or the other as long as the end in the ground do not move from it�s position, which is precisely between the feet. The mental picture I have in front of me is like a metronome.
There has been an additional text to the second paragraph on
2-H in the 7th edition.
"The important thing is that the true Swing Center for ALL COMPONENTS is around a Hinge Pin with one end at the top of the Stationay Head and the other in the ground, precisely between the feet, with no regard for Body Location or Position at any time"
How do you read this? What does it mean for you?
What is your interpritation(?) of it? (color added by rwh)
Some observations:
1. It is possible for the top of the Swing Center Hinge Pin to be located anywhere -- extreme left, extreme right, extreme forward, extreme back, and anywhere in between -- with the bottom of the hinge pin precisely between the feet. Therefore, the concept of the Swing Center Hinge Pin seeks only a stationary head but does not mandate that the head be in any particular location.
2. Since the head can be located anywhere, the Swing Center Hinge Pin is neither the spine nor any other actual body part. The Swing Center Hinge Pin is imaginary - a concept.
3. The concept of a Swing Center Hinge Pin must allow for the actual anatomical structure, physical capacity and psychological needs of the individual executing the movement.
1. It is possible for the top of the Swing Center Hinge Pin to be located anywhere -- extreme left, extreme right, extreme forward, extreme back, and anywhere in between -- with the bottom of the hinge pin precisely between the feet. Therefore, the concept of the Swing Center Hinge Pin seeks only a stationary head but does not mandate that the head be in any particular location.
I agree (and have stated several times in posts) that it is not mandatory for the player to locate the Head -- either at Address or at Impact -- "precisely between the feet" in order to establish a Pivot Center. However, having located the Head (and thus establishing the Pivot Center), it is important that its position be maintained.
Personally, I visualize the Pivot Center Hinge Pin as being perpendicular to the ground, regardless of Head position. Thus, the Hinge Pin would fall "precisely between the feet" only if the Head were so located.