-this just might be the way to get D back here. So be very, very careful.
-yes it would appear the right arm is not on plane at Address, not unusual, but not what Homer prescribed. By impact it must be there. Hard to get all that done on short shots especially. Im trying to remember D's own posture, not sure. Id have guessed it was. Changing the diagram to show this would lessen the degree of plane shift would it not.
-If instead of showing fanning and bending as being sequential ,if D blended them , the RFT portion of the backswing would be more straightline, and run diagonally from the Hands at Address to the Turned Right Shoulder. But I like seeing the fanning and bending separated , sequential for illustrative purposes, as a first step just for clarification, identification.
-this is a single shift. Not showing a return to the Elbow Plane for impact. Which is kinda steep, not a lot of #3 Angle at impact.
-However you do it a TSP plane (notice I did not say "the" TSP) is the ideal in transition I believe. How else can the Shoulders take the Hands down the inclined plane? 6-M-1. No need for a near vertical drop back to a lower Plane or uncomfortably steep shoulder planes, no automatic over the top moves given the hands are above the right shoulder or or or
-If you disregarded shaft plane and just considered the sweetspot on the clubface, so not even the sweetspot plane, it could be TSP the whole way with the Right ARm on Plane and some #3 Angle. Homer mentioned disregarding the shaft plane in connection with Angle of Approach didnt he? A near vertical plane of motion. But my head is starting to hurt again.
Right. So all I was saying in my previous post was that while the left arm flying wedge isn't on the clubshaft plane - the clubshaft can be on its plane.
With the flat left wrist - the wrist wouldn't be cocking/uncocking on the shaft plane - it's on the Left Arm Flying Wedge plane.
Here's the key - it's off (the clubshaft plane) uncocking motion BY ITSELF would create an off-plane motion of the clubshaft - however it doesn't operate by itself. Just as every joint doesn't move on plane- but the tool/shaft does move on plane - although shifting as it may.
Just like Homer's Kelley Machine- you can't have just one lever move and stay on plane see 1-L.
Also, see 2-N-1 in this respect - the orbiting clubhead is the result of divergent forces.
Lets bring Mike back too. Heck lets get the whole band together and get back on the road. The LBG traveling show , coming to your sanitarium soon.
2-N-1 is a revelation, perhaps a revolution. Never thought of the whole shaft as being resultant. That makes it all work though. That makes the Hand Path resultant too dont it. Thats deep.
Cant think of anything insulting to say right now. Maybe Bucket's got something........
Lets bring Mike back too. Heck lets get the whole band together and get back on the road. The LBG traveling show , coming to your sanitarium soon.
2-N-1 is a revelation, perhaps a revolution. Never thought of the whole shaft as being resultant. That makes it all work though. That makes the Hand Path resultant too dont it. Thats deep.
Cant think of anything insulting to say right now. Maybe Bucket's got something........
I imagine Mikey's Hand Path is very DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP. Probably employing a fairly small pulley diameter as well.