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Nailing pp#1
1 Attachment(s)
Attachment 1779
Where on the base of the thumb should pp#1 be located? Should it be over the bone indicated by the cross hatch, or is it OK to have it a little farther out over the joint. Because of the position of the thumb on the grip, using an overlapping grip,I find my pp#1 has a little give in it when pressing down across the shaft. Should this be the case? |
Lifeline
PP#1 I'd say is in the hand.
The right hand fits onto the left when you have the right side of the left thumb following the lifeline in the right hand. |
Where exactly?
I believe Scottgas2 is after a more precise answer regarding the position of the heel of the Right Hand where it touches the Left Hand thumb. Is it possible to put a cross on the image he has provided indicating the center of the #1 Pressure Point when using a 10-2-B grip?
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No because it varies by person and Grip-Basic.
Taking the grip in impact fix alignments? Right hand palm grip covering the base of the left thumb? Or turned under? Overlap, single or multiple, interlock, reverse overlap, non-overlap? Tight grip? It varies by person. The actual instruction is that PP#3 in line with the sweetspot defines "strong". And "Unless otherwise indicated, the left thumb is always placed on the same line as PP#3 and covered with the cup of the right hand palm. The thumb position encourages the ideal right wrist bend - identical to the accumulator #3 angle." A hitter might want to try the 10-2-D grip which has "the left wrist turned to the top of the shaft so that wrist cocking motion is on the same line as the right wrist bend. The #3 pressure point and the left thumb are also on the same line as the right wrist bend. Strong double action." Same as 10-2-C weak double-action for swingers, where the right wrist is rolled to the top and PP#3 is no longer in line with the sweet spot. But according to the book the 10-2-B is the only one that will preserve the Flying Wedges. |
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