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Originally Posted by njmp2
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Originally Posted by Yoda
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Remember, guys, the above post discussed the Rotated Shoulder Turn. It
was in response to a question regarding how to determine the exact amount of
Waist Bend necessary to produce an On Plane Stroke in both directions.
However, this Shoulder Turn requires Zero Axis Tilt and hence Zero Weight
Shift. That's fine for the Backstroke, but it means a Low Power Downstroke.
Therefore, it should be restricted to Short Shots.
The ideal Shoulder Turn is the Standard Variation of 10-13-A. This
involves a Backstroke Turn 'as Flat as possible' back to the Plane,
followed by a Downstroke Turn down the Plane.
The drill of 'shooting the rifle at the Plane Line' on the Downstroke
works for all On Plane Strokes involving Shoulder Turn. It should not
be used to determine the Waist Bend except as described for the Rotated
Shoulder Turn.
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And with the right forearm take away? The forearm would trace any plane it
chooses? Waist bend would be determined by?
So many questions, only one yoda to answer.
The Right Forearm is positioned ideally on the Turned Shoulder Plane at
Impact Fix (2-F). It remains on that Plane, even in Adjusted Address. In
Start-Up the Right Forearm takes the Club immediately Up, Back and In on the
Turned Shoulder Plane. In so doing, it Traces the Straight Line Base Line of
that Plane (2-N-0). The Knee and Waist Bend are established by the Player at
Impact Fix and are determined by the distance the Hips must move to allow the
Right Forearm to point at the Turned Shoulder Plane Line (7-16).