Re: Golf Physics 101
If you think using a Loreal advert as a modern metaphor to describe people discussing unnecessary science is a personal attack, then that's not my boggle. T'wasn't my intention. However it does adequately describe my feelings on this thread.
"I came, I read, I communicated my honest feeling" is a fact. If you find my matter of factness insulting, again, not my boggle. Honesty is honesty. If you take it politely or rudely, then that my be down to the ambiguity of reading text, as text does not communicate tone of voice. Or it may be that honesty hits sore spots that nobody likes to be hit.
.................anyway.......................... as we are in the mood for pointing out people missing the point, the point of my original (admittedly short, and possibly stiring) post on here (for which I have already apologised, but some don't want to let it go) was in the hope that someone might go forth and explain to me why this is helpful in learning the physical act of swinging a club to hit a ball? So far all I've got are responses that continue to lead me to the conclusion that this thread has no useful information on the subject of swinging a club.
Knowledge? Yes. I'm all for it, if it serves a purpose. But I shall refer to a previous point. If we aren't going to crack open our maths exercise books on the practice tee, or create 3D models of ourselves to send to Callaway to tell them why we can't hit the clubs they make, what is this information for? If you find it interesting, fine. I'm not saying it isn't, I'm just questioning it's use in the learning process. I might have studied the science of space exploration to the nth degree, but it won't make me a good astronaut. I'd more be in the control room talking about it, not doing it.
Tell me to get my hands ahead at impact and I'll try to do it. Why? Because it leads to ball compression and better distance and accuracy. If someone told me to get my hands ahead at impact because it causes all the scientific (and no doubt true) things previously mentioned thus-far, then I'd tell him to get lost.
And before anyone else wants to come back on here and moan some more, you can get on with discussing maths. Really. I'm not trying to blast your privilege of discussing what you want, where you want, just someone please tell me if I should go and take an Open University course in advanced Physics if it'll make me a better golfer.
If you think using a Loreal advert as a modern metaphor to describe people discussing unnecessary science is a personal attack, then that's not my boggle. T'wasn't my intention. However it does adequately describe my feelings on this thread.
"I came, I read, I communicated my honest feeling" is a fact. If you find my matter of factness insulting, again, not my boggle. Honesty is honesty. If you take it politely or rudely, then that my be down to the ambiguity of reading text, as text does not communicate tone of voice. Or it may be that honesty hits sore spots that nobody likes to be hit.
.................anyway.......................... as we are in the mood for pointing out people missing the point, the point of my original (admittedly short, and possibly stiring) post on here (for which I have already apologised, but some don't want to let it go) was in the hope that someone might go forth and explain to me why this is helpful in learning the physical act of swinging a club to hit a ball? So far all I've got are responses that continue to lead me to the conclusion that this thread has no useful information on the subject of swinging a club.
Knowledge? Yes. I'm all for it, if it serves a purpose. But I shall refer to a previous point. If we aren't going to crack open our maths exercise books on the practice tee, or create 3D models of ourselves to send to Callaway to tell them why we can't hit the clubs they make, what is this information for? If you find it interesting, fine. I'm not saying it isn't, I'm just questioning it's use in the learning process. I might have studied the science of space exploration to the nth degree, but it won't make me a good astronaut. I'd more be in the control room talking about it, not doing it.
Tell me to get my hands ahead at impact and I'll try to do it. Why? Because it leads to ball compression and better distance and accuracy. If someone told me to get my hands ahead at impact because it causes all the scientific (and no doubt true) things previously mentioned thus-far, then I'd tell him to get lost.
And before anyone else wants to come back on here and moan some more, you can get on with discussing maths. Really. I'm not trying to blast your privilege of discussing what you want, where you want, just someone please tell me if I should go and take an Open University course in advanced Physics if it'll make me a better golfer.
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