Loading the Secondary Lever requires a Swivel. The Secondary Lever Simultaneously "Loads on the Plane of the Left Wrist Cock" while Maintaining the Geometry of the Right Forearm Flying Wedge and "Loads On-Plane" (Swing-Plane).
Your Second question is still a little fuzzy. Should my answer include every possible scenario including "Manipulating Hands Players" or "Standard-Inherent Only Hinging"?
Ok I'll agree with you there . . . I thought you were talking Loading "general" . . . witcha . . .
On number 2 . . . sure why not . . . include the whole dealie.
Ok I'll agree with you there . . . I thought you were talking Loading "general" . . . witcha . . .
On number 2 . . . sure why not . . . include the whole dealie.
By "The Book":
Quote:
2-G HINGE MOTION ......These motions actually duplicate the three possible hinge mountings – horizontal, vertical and angled – representing all three Basic Planes (7-5). The Hands can be educated to reproduce them by holding at least one Hand vertical or parallel to the corresponding Basic Plane. These motions also duplicate the motions of paddles of a paddlewheel rotating around its axis vertical to one of the three Basic Planes. And an equivalent could be “Clubface Paddlewheel Action” executed as a Left Wrist Paddlewheel Motion. Thus, though some procedures may cause the Clubface to “Close” in relation to the Plane Line, none will be an actual “Roll” of the Hands. See 2-C and 6-B-3-0.
So.......True "Drive-Out" produced by a Pure Punch Elbow Location (not the one O.b. Left executes), aligns the Right Forearm Wedge so that the Right Hand Rotates around its Axis Vertical to the Angled Plane.
True "Throw-out" produced by the Infallible and Artistically Applied Pitched Elbow Location (in Innercityteachers Dreams), Aligns the Right Forearm Wedge so that the Right Hand Rotates around its Axis Vertical to the Horizontal Plane.
"Off the Record":
"Grip it and Rip it". There is enough "Tolerance" that the Hands (educated) can override the Inherently produced Hinging of "Drive-Out" or "Throw-Out". Especially with Drive-Out on Flatter Planes, the Hitter is more able to produce Horizontal Hinging (especially longer Clubs); and Throw-Out on Steeper Planes, the Swinger is more able to produce Angled Hinging (especially with shorter Clubs). This is very good fortune, especially for the disadvantaged Hitter to aptly produce Horizontal Hinging for longer clubs so that he no longer is called a "short Smacker" or whatever term Ted calls them.