If you watch a girl slowly twirl a baton you can see the ends going round and round. If she twirls fast enough, then the ends blur and she can make the baton look like a spinning disk. If she has a 42” thin rope with a weight at each end and spins it slowly over her head, then the weighted ends would droop and it would appear as though she is spinning a cone shaped object. If she spins the rope very fast, centrifugal force will pull the weights outward and the rope will straighten and it will look like it did when she twirled the baton.
The faster she twirls, the greater the centrifugal force and the tighter and straighter the rope. The two weighted ends are moving directly away from each other so the rope is in a straight line. If the ends didn’t pull directly opposite each other, then the rope would be bent in some way.
If she spins the rope with weighted ends, and hits your car door with one of the ends, the weighted end will dent your car door. Centrifugal Force did not cause the dent. The velocity of the weight caused the dent.
The Hitter does not use Centrifugal Force. He applies muscular force to the Primary Lever through the #1 Pressure Point by the #1 Accumulator and Uncocks the Left Wrist using the Same Muscular effort down the same path. The primary Lever is the Left Arm connected to the Clubshaft with a Flat Left Wrist. The Left Arm Flying Wedge. The endless belt effect is how the velocity at the end of the secondary lever increases without increasing its RPM. TGM Golfers will agree that the hitter does not use CF. And that’s correct. They are also aware of two Levers. One Primary and one Secondary.
The Swinger does not load the Primary Lever. Why? Because he hasn’t created one. Centrifugal Force creates the Primary Lever. It Pulls the Clubshaft in line with the Left Arm so together, they become one long stiff solid Primary Lever beginning at the moment just before Impact. Then the Hinge (one of three) guides the Primary Lever through Impact.
Every choice of component variation that a Swinger uses must set the stage and make it possible for the Left Arm and Clubshaft to be assembled into a Primary Lever by Centrifugal Force. That means that the Left Arm and Clubshaft need to be carried in a specific way with specific alignments down to the Release Zone so that when Centrifugal Force pulls on the clubhead it will create a straight and stiff Lever.
So if the Clubhead is going one way and the Left Arm another, then Centrifugal Force will yank them into alignment but it will be too late. The ball will already be gone.
It's just a thought. I'm prepared to be corrected.