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-   -   Bent right arm (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=5498)

Ed Miller 03-16-2008 09:27 AM

Bent right arm
 
With the season approaching, I have been doing some preparation. Is it correct to think of using the pivot to carry a bent right arm to impact? If so, when does the right arm "blast off" the chest and how does one avoid over acceleration when using that violent sounding swing thought?

neil 03-16-2008 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ed Miller (Post 51267)
With the season approaching, I have been doing some preparation. Is it correct to think of using the pivot to carry a bent right arm to impact? If so, when does the right arm "blast off" the chest and how does one avoid over acceleration when using that violent sounding swing thought?

I would think more of carrying the right forearm flying wedge into impact -the right arm cannot be straight at impact if you have set up correctly.
The right arm does not "blast off"-unless you are a leftie.
The left arm is thrown off the chest by the pivot.
The right arm is trying to straighten and the right wrist is trying to stay bent.
Overacceleration-make sure you are PULLING all the way down -if you lose pressure in pp#3 you are overaccelerating.
This is from a swingers perspective:salut:

brownman 03-17-2008 06:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by neil (Post 51271)
I would think more of carrying the right forearm flying wedge into impact -the right arm cannot be straight at impact if you have set up correctly.
The right arm does not "blast off"-unless you are a leftie.
The left arm is thrown off the chest by the pivot.
The right arm is trying to straighten and the right wrist is trying to stay bent.
Overacceleration-make sure you are PULLING all the way down -if you lose pressure in pp#3 you are overaccelerating.
This is from a swingers perspective:salut:

neil,r/forearm flying wedge,at what point would you remove wedge ,I thought that it starts to straighten pretty much as it starts down,so long as you made initial pivot move back to square ,this would ensure that you dont run out of r/arm through impact.thanks

neil 03-17-2008 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brownman (Post 51314)
neil,r/forearm flying wedge,at what point would you remove wedge ,I thought that it starts to straighten pretty much as it starts down,so long as you made initial pivot move back to square ,this would ensure that you dont run out of r/arm through impact.thanks

Don't "remove " the wedges!
The right wrist stays bent ,left stays flat throughout the whole motion.
The bent right elbow does not straighten until follow through (the both arms straight position )-approx 45* to the ground shaft position.
If the right arm straightens at impact or before -you have run out of right arm-and lag pressure.
Don't think of the wedges as not being there just because the 90* angle isn't retained between the forearms-just think of the RFFW and LFFW oppsing one another -the bent right wrist is always at 90* to the plane of the left wristcock.:golf:

brownman 03-17-2008 08:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by neil (Post 51320)
Don't "remove " the wedges!
The right wrist stays bent ,left stays flat throughout the whole motion.
The bent right elbow does not straighten until follow through (the both arms straight position )-approx 45* to the ground shaft position.
If the right arm straightens at impact or before -you have run out of right arm-and lag pressure.
Don't think of the wedges as not being there just because the 90* angle isn't retained between the forearms-just think of the RFFW and LFFW oppsing one another -the bent right wrist is always at 90* to the plane of the left wristcock.:golf:

Big sorry neil,I wrongly referred to R/elbow as being a wedge(forgive my no-brainer),
What I meant to say was,as the R/shoulder drives R/elbow down into impact zone,at what point does the R/elbow start to straighten,or does it start to unbend as soon as the downstroke begins.I hope you follow me.Thanks again

neil 03-18-2008 05:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brownman (Post 51335)
Big sorry neil,I wrongly referred to R/elbow as being a wedge(forgive my no-brainer),
What I meant to say was,as the R/shoulder drives R/elbow down into impact zone,at what point does the R/elbow start to straighten,or does it start to unbend as soon as the downstroke begins.I hope you follow me.Thanks again

If anything,it bends more on the initial part of the downstroke.
The right arm can only begin to straighten when the left arm is thrown off the chest.

okie 03-18-2008 07:26 AM

Right sided game for right handers
 
It is thrown off by the right shoulder moving down the selected plane, correct?

neil 03-18-2008 07:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by okie (Post 51347)
It is thrown off by the right shoulder moving down the selected plane, correct?

I would say it is (the left arm),thrown off the chest by the pivot.
Please remember my first post in this thread, -I stressed that my comments are from a swingers perspective.
I am well aware that this is the Hitters domain ,but I responded because I detected a confusion of components-maybe wrongly.
However ,from a swinger -it is all PULL-therefore "chain reaction":golf:

6bmike 03-18-2008 08:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ed Miller (Post 51267)
With the season approaching, I have been doing some preparation. Is it correct to think of using the pivot to carry a bent right arm to impact? If so, when does the right arm "blast off" the chest and how does one avoid over acceleration when using that violent sounding swing thought?

Pivot transports the power package which include the arms, hands amd club so the bent right wrist would be carried or transported by the pivot. It is the throw out of a swinger that has the left arm blast off the chest via the pivot and the right shoulder thrust (the intial move of the start down). A hitter drives his right arm against a 'backboard' of the right shoulder. Over accerleration is the loss of clubhead lag and therefore bad rhythm and spent accumulators.

brownman 03-19-2008 04:00 AM

Thanks 6bmike,I,m personally at a loss as to when the r/arm actually begins to straighten out,I mean,does the r/shoulder carry the B/arm to a point in d/swing and then begin to straighten out or,does it begin to straighten out as soon as d/swing starts,with the shoulder adding the extra push(or backboard,I like that).Thanks


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