For a hitter, is it imperative to keep the left arm straight at the top of the backswing or are you allowed to bend it minimally?
Originally Posted by golfchicago For a hitter, is it imperative to keep the left arm straight at the top of the backswing or are you allowed to bend it minimally?With radial acceleration the goal, it's nice to have a radius (straight left arm). If the left arm is allowed to bend, the stage is set for a form of longitudinal acceleration. In the right arms effort to re-straighten the left arm in startdown, some energy has to move outward or away from the body. This would have to happen before using the straight line delivery path.
Originally Posted by YodasLuke With radial acceleration the goal, it's nice to have a radius (straight left arm). If the left arm is allowed to bend, the stage is set for a form of longitudinal acceleration.You lost me in this part Ted.
Originally Posted by birdie_man You lost me in this part Ted.Yes, and yes.
Does Radial Accel. = Hitting?
Longitud. Accel. = Swinging?
-Paul
Originally Posted by golfchicago For a hitter, is it imperative to keep the left arm straight at the top of the backswing or are you allowed to bend it minimally?Minimal bend is alright as long as you keep it constant. In other words, the length of your left arm should remain the same from Address to Follow Through.
Originally Posted by tongzilla Minimal bend is alright as long as you keep it constant. In other words, the length of your left arm should remain the same from Address to Follow Through.That's true, and it would qualify as a constant radius. As in the paw stroke when putting, the constant bend in the arms is the substitute for full extensor action. In other words, the distance between the left shoulder and the clubhead remains constant throughout the stroke. Some have a bend in the arm that will not straighten, whether by birth or by some injury to the arm. Anyone that has the ability to straighten the left arm completely would have to have conscious, muscular control of that arm to keep the right arm from completely straightening it. Then comes the real threat: force. As the club accelerates and gains in mass, the amount of force needed to keep the bend in the arm has to increase. Additionally, this opposing force needs to be increasing at the same rate (equal and opposite).