Ok boys. Stay with me on this.
I pose to y'all a question . . .
What is WALKING? or What causes WALKING?

Originally Posted by 12 piece bucketA shift in the center of gravity so as to cause a "controlled fall".
What is WALKING? or What causes WALKING?
Originally Posted by Tom Bartlett A shift in the center of gravity so as to cause a "controlled fall".I totally agree with Tom. It is a "controlled fall", and your feet continuously keep your face from making contact with terra firma. It's when the feet are uneducated as to their respective tasks that impact is inevitable, of which my 7 month old is becoming more aware. One of the major snares in this model is alcohol. This substance interrupts the brain to feet connection.
Originally Posted by YodasLuke I totally agree with Tom. It is a "controlled fall", and your feet continuously keep your face from making contact with terra firma. It's when the feet are uneducated as to their respective tasks that impact is inevitable, of which my 7 month old is becoming more aware. One of the major snares in this model is alcohol. This substance interrupts the brain to feet connection.Yep. You think this has anything to do with the operation of the Machine? The "controlled fall" not the alcohol part . . .
"Occifer, I'm not as think as you drunk I am."
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley 94720-3140, USA.
Walking is often modeled as an inverted pendulum system in which the center of mass vaults over the rigid stance limb. Running is modeled as a simple spring-mass system in which the center of mass bounces along on the compliant stance limb. In these models, differences in stance-limb behavior lead to nearly opposite patterns of vertical movements of the center of mass in the two gaits. Our goal was to quantify the importance of stance-limb behavior and other factors in determining the trajectory of the center of mass during walking and running. We collected kinematic and force platform data during human walking and running. Virtual stance-limb compression (i.e. reduction in the distance between the point of foot-ground contact and the center of mass during the first half of the stance phase) was only 26% lower for walking (0.091 m) than for running (0.123 m) at speeds near the gait transition speed. In spite of this relatively small difference, the center of mass moved upwards by 0.031 m during the first half of the stance phase during walking and moved downwards by 0.073 m during the first half of the stance phase during running. The most important reason for this difference was that the stance limb swept through a larger angle during walking (30.4 degrees) than during running (19.2 degrees). We conclude that stance-limb touchdown angle and virtual stance-limb compression both play important roles in determining the trajectory of the center of mass and whether a gait is a walk or a run.

Originally Posted by 12 piece bucket Yep. You think this has anything to do with the operation of the Machine? The "controlled fall" not the alcohol part . . .Are you trying to make the connection with the "counter fall" as described in David Lee's Gravity Golf?
Originally Posted by Tom Bartlett A shift in the center of gravity so as to cause a "controlled fall".That is the answer I was a lookin for! How would you connect that to The Golfing Machine?