James Marshall (Hogan1953)
New member
Does anybody know how open or closed the face has to be at separation for the ball not to go more or less in the direction the head is travelling?
Does anybody know how open or closed the face has to be at separation for the ball not to go more or less in the direction the head is travelling?
that is what i was addressing, hence the qualification of no hook/slice......I think he means how far open or closed does the blade have to be before the ball immediatey goes left or right of the line the club is being swung on, i.e. the ball no longer starts down the target line and then bends one way or the other, but starts left or right of the target line immediately...
agreed, except that it is square separation that matters, not impact...My feeling is that whenever the clubface is not square at impact, the ball never really sets out exactly down the target line, but slightly towards whichever way the blade is oriented.
depnds on how you set-up and execute it...So technically, when you say, aim left to fade to right fairway, the ball will always start more to the center of the fairway than you think. Vice -versa for hooks/draws.
i'll let hogan1953 decide what he means and is trying to figure out...
hcw,
I don't think that is what he means...I think he is probably trying to figure out what is a true "pull hook" or "push fade" rather than a shot that looks like one, but isn't...
that is what i was addressing, hence the qualification of no hook/slice...
depnds on how you set-up and execute it...
...Say that their findings put it at 70% of the face angle—off of the path.
Can you clarify that Brian?...what does 70% of the face angle mean?...
Not Brian, but check out this webpage developed by a technical thinking clubmaker. His writeup indicates the ball starts out on a path determined by roughly 85% due to clubface angle and 15% due to clubhead path(it actually depends on the difference between path and face but this is for small differences). This correlates fairly well to what other scientists have written about and is fairly close to the 70% number that Brian quoted.
http://www.tutelman.com/golfclubs/DesignNotes/swing2.php?ref=clubmakeronline