At what point does basic become acquired and then full
Hi there
I would like to know using a imaginary clock, and say your address position is 6 o'clock,
At what position on the clock do you think the take away would change from a basic to a aquired and then a full swing and the same with the follow through.
Sat we used the left arm as the hand of the clock,
This may sound like a silly question but if is so simple to use clock lines to assist in the transition between positions and to simplify the moves using a mirror.
Any help would be great here.
Regards
Addam
Last edited by addamsmith : 08-21-2007 at 06:05 AM.
I would think that in basic motion the left wrist would move to 5oclock on the way back and through to 7 oclock for, for aquired motion the left wrist would move to 3 oclock on the backswing and through to 9 oclock, and on the full swing the left wrist would move to 1oclock for me and to 11oclock in the followthrough. if i am wrong with this please correct me
Hi there
I would like to know using a imaginary clock, and say your address position is 6 o'clock,
At what position on the clock do you think the take away would change from a basic to a aquired and then a full swing and the same with the follow through.
Sat we used the left arm as the hand of the clock,
This may sound like a silly question but if is so simple to use clock lines to assist in the transition between positions and to simplify the moves using a mirror.
Any help would be great here.
Regards
Addam
Visit The Gallery and log on to Lynn's lessons with Collin Neeman.
Hi there
I would like to know using a imaginary clock, and say your address position is 6 o'clock,
At what position on the clock do you think the take away would change from a basic to a aquired and then a full swing and the same with the follow through.
Sat we used the left arm as the hand of the clock,
This may sound like a silly question but if is so simple to use clock lines to assist in the transition between positions and to simplify the moves using a mirror.
Any help would be great here.
Regards
Addam
I don’t see the relevance of a clock face when learning Basic or Acquired Motions. You monitor the Hands, not the clubhead and the clock face lies flat- not on an incline, the clubhead like the hands travel up and back.
The ball is located on the Base Line- a straight Line that is attached to the Inclined Plane. Trace the Base Line, sometimes called the Incline Plane Line, with the Hands. The clubhead will take care of itself on your clock face. The Mind is in the Hands, not the clubhead.
Basic Motion is the clubhead moving two feet in both directions from the ball. Trace the straight Base Line with the hands and you will see the clubhead move in an arc. Trace Linear- Clubhead moves in an Arc. As Homer says, the only thing the moves in a curve is the clubhead.
Acquire Motion is Basic Motion that ‘acquired’ a motion. A slight weight shift, a shoulder turn, a wrist cock, roll, release and a follow-through.
Acquire Motion is still a Linear tracing of the Base Line with the arms not going past parallel to the ground. Clubhead should be pointed skyward.
Hi there
I would like to know using a imaginary clock, and say your address position is 6 o'clock,
At what position on the clock do you think the take away would change from a basic to a aquired and then a full swing and the same with the follow through.
Sat we used the left arm as the hand of the clock,
This may sound like a silly question but if is so simple to use clock lines to assist in the transition between positions and to simplify the moves using a mirror.
Any help would be great here.
Regards
Addam
Your question- your answers
Basic- 7 to 5
Acquired- 8 to 4
Full- individually determined depending on flexibility, etc.-
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If it is the clubhead- AM would be 9-3 since the arms go to parallel. IN the Golfing Machine the Right forearm level to the ground is the measurement for acquired motion.
And going to any of these clockface numbers can be done without traveling on an Incline Plane- and what does that get you?
Mike,
I assumed via his question that he was looking for a non-golfing machine answer- since he liked the left arm and clock analogy for adjusting swing length. I just gave him my own quickie answer- making my own "Golfing Machine Translation". Regarding "what does that get you"- you'd have to ask him. I assumed he was just taking a three dimensional movement (inclined plane motion)- and converting it into a 2 dimensional measuring system (the face of the clock) for determining length of swing in a mirror. In a similar sense you do the same thing with angle of approach measurements etc.- taking a three dimenisonal movement and looking at it in a 2 dimensional format.
I did like your previous post- in that you said you should monitor the hands and not the clubhead. Probably would have been a good idea for Homer to measure the basic motion length via hand motion and not clubhead motion so that the focus is in the right place.
__________________
Life Goal- Developing a new theory of movement based on Brain Science
Interests - Dabbling with insanity
Hobbies- Creating Quality
I did like your previous post- in that you said you should monitor the hands and not the clubhead. Probably would have been a good idea for Homer to measure the basic motion length via hand motion and not clubhead motion so that the focus is in the right place.
I thought so at first, too. But I don't think a measurement is what Homer wanted for Plane Line tracing Hands. Basic Motion Curriculum could have been clearer but that is what AIs are for. And it was- "Non-Technical -- Simplified"
Hi Guy's
Thanks for your replies,
I got anwsers I was looking for. I beleive that it is almost impossible to use a clock system to train the hands to determine positions on movements with the golf machine.
I know Pelz uses it for distance relating to length of the swing for the short game and I was thinking is it possible to help others to understand the shift from Basis to the Acquired positions.
What I have in my studio for teaching is a swing plane board and a Large mirror opposite the board. when I swing and just feel positions it feels good. but when I look in the mirror which has lines it does not feel right.
What feels right to me is 2 feet back 2 feet through for a basis and once past that point and I start to use the hinge it becomes a acqiured motion.
I am going to stick with feel rather than points of change that pelz uses.
Yoda's videos with collin sum it up 100%.
Thanks for all your feedback guy's
Hope this makes sense.
Thanks Guy's
Addam
Last edited by addamsmith : 08-22-2007 at 10:30 PM.