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Old 02-07-2012, 01:51 AM
O.B.Left O.B.Left is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2006
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Originally Posted by Daryl View Post

I wish I could. If you knew about it, then you'd be playing on the "Hooters" Tour. That's why I'm doing the video. "Right Forearm Participation in the Golf Swing: per TGM"
Im not on the Hooters tour? When did that happen? [/quote]


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The Right Forearm can Trace the Plane line when it's On-Plane. The Right Forearm can be On-Plane when the Right Elbow is On-Plane.
Yes agreed. This is a good point ...... Trace with the #3pp only.


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Oh? Actually, the Right Forearm doesn't rotate around the LCOG. It Rotates around the Hinge.

When you throw a Javelin, you don't rotate around the LCOG. When you skip a stone on the surface of water, you don't rotate the LCOG. If you do, then the stone dives into the water and the Javelin impels a spectator. Both Throwing a Javelin and Skipping a Stone use Right Forearm Wedge Geometry. And with both activities, the Right Forearm Wedge Rotates around the Right Elbow. By the way, if you did rotate around the LCOG, you would be Swiveling. The Golf Shaft Rotates around the LCOG but not the Wedges.
If the Plane of the respective Wedges maintain a constant relationship to each other (90 degrees say) and to the club shaft (top and aft) and the shaft rotates around the LCOG wouldn't the wedges rotate also? In other words don't the wedges rotate with Hinge Action as well as swivel action?



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I can assure everyone that concepts in TGM are easy to understand.



TGM , the yellow book about golf right ?

Last edited by O.B.Left : 02-07-2012 at 01:55 AM.
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