Lately I've been thinking about the swing in terms of physics, succeeding mainly in confusing myself and wishing that I was a science major rather than an English major. These are a few questions I've come up with:
-If a lever is by definition rigid, are there any true levers in the golf swing? Obviously the club bends, so it isn't completely rigid, but enough so to transfer force. The individual arm bones are rigid, but the arm itself is not. Is the whole left arm a lever? Is it a lever only at certain points in the swing?
-Is the club a third class lever? If so, what would the fulcrum be? My guess is the left pinky, but I'm not sure.
-What other levers are at work in the swing, as you see it?
-People talk about how golfers with long arms have an advantage due to the longer radius. What exactly makes the longer radius an advantage? Could it be a disadvantage (work = force x distance)? Is the arm's length an advantage because it allows the radius to be shortened more?
-Is the clubhead's speed represented by radial acceleration? Is it possible to provide a (relatively) simple representation of the relationship between radial acceleration, centripetal force, and centrifugal force? Which is the most relevant for the golf swing, or are they equally important?
I have thoughts on a few of these, so if some of the questions seem to be leading to a certain answer it's because they are. I'm interested in Mandrin's response, but if you know the answer and can explain it conclusively in the simplest terms possible, then please drop some knowledge. Feel free to add questions as well, or to refine the ones I've asked.
-If a lever is by definition rigid, are there any true levers in the golf swing? Obviously the club bends, so it isn't completely rigid, but enough so to transfer force. The individual arm bones are rigid, but the arm itself is not. Is the whole left arm a lever? Is it a lever only at certain points in the swing?
-Is the club a third class lever? If so, what would the fulcrum be? My guess is the left pinky, but I'm not sure.
-What other levers are at work in the swing, as you see it?
-People talk about how golfers with long arms have an advantage due to the longer radius. What exactly makes the longer radius an advantage? Could it be a disadvantage (work = force x distance)? Is the arm's length an advantage because it allows the radius to be shortened more?
-Is the clubhead's speed represented by radial acceleration? Is it possible to provide a (relatively) simple representation of the relationship between radial acceleration, centripetal force, and centrifugal force? Which is the most relevant for the golf swing, or are they equally important?
I have thoughts on a few of these, so if some of the questions seem to be leading to a certain answer it's because they are. I'm interested in Mandrin's response, but if you know the answer and can explain it conclusively in the simplest terms possible, then please drop some knowledge. Feel free to add questions as well, or to refine the ones I've asked.