Much has been written and posted. Check Yoda’s archives on PDF. In the meantime, it is the vertical only movement of the left wrist combined with the horizontal only movement of the right wrist. The Flying Wedges, to me, is The Golfing Machine in a nutshell.
The Flying wedge also describes the appearance of the right arm to the left arm at the top. The left arm appearing as the wing of an airplane and the right arm the supporting strut attached to the wing.
As in this image http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/images/3...9283_tiger.jpg
I'll take a crack at this one; here's how I understand the "flying" piece.
It's has to do with how those forearm angles/wedges relate to one another and the selected plane. The right and left wedges should be perpendicular to one another...it keeps the left wrist flat through impact and controls the clubface. The wedges also have specific alignments to the selected plane during the swing (different for swinger and hitter); regardless, the wedges "fly" as a single unit, aligned on plane, into and through impact.
The Flying Wedges -- Power Package Basic Structure
Originally Posted by metallion
I am getting it. Each wedge is the angle between the (extension of the) clubshaft and the respective forearm.
Left wedge: Angle varies with wrist cock.
Right wedge: Angle varies with wrist bend.
Finallly makes sense...
Very good, Metallion. By jove, I think you've got it!
For a visual at Impact Fix, check 6bmike's photo of my Arms and Club in my avatar at the immediate left of this post. For a larger image, check the same photo at the top left of this thread.
Soon, we will introduce a graphic representation of this photo as our logo, along with an entirely 'new look' to our site. You're gonna love it!