Does it say anywhere in the book how long one should maintain a FLW? My instructor wants me to hold it almost to the finish, which is quite hard to do. It helps me strike the ball very very solidly, but it's going to take a butt load of practice to ingrain this into my swing. I was looking at Tour swings on youtube and I couldn't find anyone that didn't break a FLW during the swivel? Should I keep on practicing this or is it not quite necessary to build a solid swing?
See 6-B-3-0-1 THE FLYING WEDGES and reference Yoda's comment about the flat left wrist in one of the Gallery sessions with John Riegger. Maybe someone will comment on the exchange with John.
As I understand it:
The flw is the angle in the primary lever at the left wrist. notice I do not say cocked because the wedge exists until #3 accumulator reaches zero (uncocked). that will not happen until both arms straight at followthrough. but. the wedge is flat to the left wrist at impact(level also-don't confuse). How it gets there is a function of hinge action . Cocked at release-level at impact/or low point-uncocked at follow through. always flat
2-P wristcock
I think your instructor is exactly right.
The Bear
Last edited by HungryBear : 07-27-2010 at 06:17 AM.
Reason: to add ref. to 2-P
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