mandrin
New
Weight shift is usually thought to be induced by a lateral motion of the lower body, it can however have various causes. Let’s have a closer look at weight shift in a golf swing.
Figure 5 ... the total dynamic weight increases ( to near maximum... but not quite) when the rotating arm is vertical.
This would appear to be the "low point " of this robot's swing? Maybe
This increase in "dynamic weight" is different to Homer Kelley's "effective mass"?? probably??
You have said before that the mass of the clubhead does not increase during swing ... but the weight does?? ( but mass is consatnt... and g is constant??)![]()
Also you used the comparison of differing weighted "iron byrons" in previous discussion ( maybe tungsten byron... the big "heavy set" member of the Byron family... everyone thinks that he should be a hitter but he wants to swing...) can you expand on this with respect to your weight transfer discussion please.
....Also some consider the position of the trail elbow prior to impact to be important and view the lateral motion of the body target wise as being necessary to allow the trail elbow to obtain its correct position to function optimally as the swing center just prior and through impact.
It would be quite interesting and very useful to hear from the real experts on this forum, who teach golf for a living, their views on weight shift in a golf swing.
golfbulldog,Brian teased us some months ago asking why most pros return to the elbow plane at impact... not sure he gave an official answer...
But the on plane right forearm is a standard alignment in TGM...
Wait and see what the pros say about it.
Homer liked it , i think, as a support for impact deceleration ( something that you feel is not possible/required in clubhead-ball impacts - i think)...
Thing is it occurs naturally in so many great swings that it must be an "effect" from swinging well rather than be a "cause" of great impact.... is that what you thinking Mandrin?
PS thanks for the fully worded teaching session on your diagrams - good stuff!
Mandrin
You said...However, the golf swing has a virtual center somewhere in the upper body. Shifting the body therefore not only shifts weight but also directly bears on the position of the swing center, and moving this center appropriately during the down swing can increase the clubhead speed.
Where would you guess is that virtual center?
There is nevertheless birdie_man who admits that getting to find out things sounds like a lot of work and fears a “cranium explosion”!I don’t think that it is really so dramatic.
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Michael, I agree, there is not a single golf instruction book quite like it.Mandrin,
Interesting that link study in the first post had a reference at the end to Joe Norwood - His book Golf -O- Metrics is one of my favorites - old but great - Never heard anyone reference it before --- very cool
mandrin,
could you give us an example of whose weight shift is what you would call "ideal" and then elaborate a little on what it is they do and how they do it? interesting topic, very important.