What I know about the F2 club is the difference in it from a traditional club is it had a forward leading edge, so presumably the hosel does not get in the way of the ball.
So the design is supposedly such that it lessens the chance of shanking and perhaps it allows you to "get the leading edge under the ball" easier, while using your normal swing.
So, the intent is not to do anything different with the swing with the F2. You will play it as you would a traditional wedge.
I'll second that. A golfing buddy loves his F2 wedges. Plays them like normal wedges - lines up the bottom groove and swings away. Loves that there's no more shanked chips.
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