| Initial Review of SwingRiteMay 16 2009 at 12:09 PM | Tom (Login Roveri) |
Response to SwingRite Device |
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The device delivers a sharp clicking sound and a pronounced jolt to the hands can be felt when the device releases in the head. After each swing a quick shake of the head resets the internal mechanism.
It takes a sense of timing to match the click with the bottom of one's arc on the downswing. If the setting is at "1" I need to swing with less than full speed or else the click will happen too soon in the downswing. If I crank the setting up to "3" the click occurs after impact unless I swing like a maniac (for me). I can not make the SwingRite click at all at 3.25 no matter how hard I ty to swing. My nephew can trigger SwingRite at setting "4" but the click is late.
In "The Golf Swing of the Future" Mindy writes: "I believe that for most golfers the only way to develop a sound swing is to use the SwingRite in simulated practice at home where you can concentrate on the details of your swing." Mindy said that once he developed the SwingRite he could train without hitting balls and that over the course of a year he became a single-figure handicap golfer and that he logged a few hundred thousand swings with SwingRite in a short time. He suggests that a golfer can accomplish a desired swing change by using SwingRite a few thousand times over the course of a week or so. He says that you can swing SwingRite once every few seconds which makes an intended movement habitual quickly and also builds strength and stamina.
I don't have the fitness to swing as much as Mindy advocates. I'm lucky if I can tolerate 20 swings in a day in my back yard. Mindy would recommend 15 times that amount.
Tom |
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