LynnBlakeGolf Forums - View Single Post - Eldrick Picture..good?bad? depends? Thread: Eldrick Picture..good?bad? depends? View Single Post #109 12-23-2011, 08:21 PM brianid Member Join Date: Jul 2011 Posts: 62 Originally Posted by O.B.Left What the Colon Saunders said there.... and Research Homers Lag Pressure which relates to Acceleration and Mass. It is not the same as common golf speak's "lag " or left wrist cock. One is a pressure measured in psi the other is an angle measured in degrees. #3 can not precede #2. They can go at the same time however or #2 can go first. It relates to the physics of Hitting vs Swinging. If you thrust on the aft of the shaft against #1pp you will roll #3 yes and #2 will get thrown out in the process with some help from the direction of thrust and the pull of CF. Simultaneous Release. No way around it either. Swingers can with their left hand turned to plane throwout #2 down plane however with the #3 firing later . Sequenced. These are different applications of the wooden golfers flail that Lynn and Homer used for demonstrative purposes. The golfers flail being different than the farmers flail in that no horizontal left hand motion is allowed, possible given its construction. To undo #2 angle is to accelerate the club head . Homer called it Velocity Power. Makes sense to me that power and velocity are good things to apply to the ball so with that in mind why do we try to hang on to it? Delayed Release of #2 should have no "hanging on to it". Wouldn't do that with a hammer when striking a nail. Hammer the thing hard. Its not how hard you hang on to it but how hard you uncock it (later being better of course, smaller pulley wheel ) This is non automatic (left wrist throw) swinger type thinking. The golfers flail for the swinger. Uncock hard towards the plane line and then let it roll over . Uncock then roll. Sequenced or as MJ points overlapped to some degree. PS don't try the hard hammering thing without a roll at the bottom .... a hard left wrist throw with a hold off can hurt your left wrist... . I correct myself, I should have said in there release of pa3 AFTER start-down/transition. I understand what you're saying. But I tend to prefer rotational power than velocity power. Why? It's because I don't think there's any need to put your mind on pa2 release. It will release no matter what you do. It won't only if you don't roll/release pa3 and you just make a pure lateral/horizontal motion of your body and left hand. But once you roll that pa3, pa2 WILL release. Maybe for people who can't turn their body for whatever physical limitations, velocity power is the priority. But for those who really turn, who really pivots, rotational power is definitely the way. Power would in my estimation be almost the same. The difference is ACCURACY. Hitting the sweet spot more often. Which if you have, you can give it all you've got. brianid View Public Profile Send a private message to brianid Find all posts by brianid