Originally Posted by Jeff
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I can understand the right arm pushing the lever assemblies only as occurring in two ways - the right arm can push against PP#3 and/or PP#1.
I thought that if the right arm pushes against PP#3 using an axe handle technique (radial direction) that it represents hitting. If it represents hitting, then isn't this "right arm pushing the lever assemblies" a power stroke? Why does he call it a trigger? Also, doesn't the push action occur, from a biomechanical perspective, from the active straightening of the right elbow via active right triceps action - which is an active release of PA#1? In other words, how can this "right arm throw" action be a trigger and not a power stroke (due to release of PA#1) if the golfer is hitting.
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Jeff,
Of course, as in your quote above,
if the golfer is
Hitting ("radial acceleration / axe handle technique"), the Right Arm Throw
Trigger is prelude to Right Arm
Thrust through Impact and does indeed ultimate in a
Right Arm Power Stroke. However, my response was to
your premise as postulated in your Post # 30 above (which mandated Swinging):
"Then his right arm throw action induces a passive release of PA#2 via centrifugal action (rather than an axehandle technique of radial force being applied against pressure point #3)."
And this is a
Swing -- by your own definition -- with a
Right Arm Release
Trigger.
