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Old 10-23-2005, 12:21 AM
MizunoJoe MizunoJoe is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 719
Originally Posted by Weightshift
2nd para "The proportion of the separation rate to the approach rate expresses the elasticity involved, and is called the Coefficient of Restitution which is 80% for better golf balls - but drops below 70% at high speeds..."

3rd para "This means that even with precise geometrical alignments the ball will not separate from the club at more than 80% of their approach speed. That produces, roughly, this condition - the Clubhead approaching Impact at 100 MPH has slowed to 80 MPH at separation."

Ok so far

"The ball leaves the club at about 70 MPH (70% of 100 MPH approach speed). "

Ok -- if 100 mph is considered a 'high speed' as above in 2nd para, but why mention it again!

"To do this the ball must be travelling 150 MPH."

150 mph ?? - I don't see the logic!!
PLEASE EXPLAIN

"If the Clubhead speed at separation is 40 MPH, the ball can only travel 110 MPH under this law."

Agreed if 40 mph is 70% of 110 mph, sounds about right, but why repeat it?

"Notice this - the ball acquires only 70% of the Clubhead "approach" speed (so there must be some speed) but 100% of the Clubhead separation speed (so there must be resistance to
deceleration)."

It doesn't "acquire" separation speed - the speed at separation is less than the approach speed because of the Impact Interval.

3rd para "The divergent Impact and Separation Vectors (2-C-1/2/3) are always equal in..."

I can find no such vectors in those drawings nor in the 'Vector Symbol Legend'. Where are they?

Thanks in advance,
Alan (22-10-05)
The ball gets 70% of clubhead impact velo, which is 70 mph if the impact velo is 100 mph. In addition it gets 100% of clubhead separation velo, which is at best 80% of impact velo due to energy losses. So assuming the best case, this gives a separation velo of 80 mph. So ball speed is 70 + 80 = 150 mph.
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