Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Golf myth: Use rail images to align your shots

Many golf books tell you how to align yourself by letting you imagine yourself standing on a railroad track, having a ball on another railroad track, and the ball's orbit on it directly reaching the target. They also warned that if you set the target you are tracking to point to the target, you will aim the ball 20 yards to the right. This image is useless and warns of errors.

Let us deal with the warning first. Parallel tracks under your feet will be parallel at a distance of 150 yards. There is an illusion, they are divided, you see, if you stand behind the "track" and look down, but that's all. This is the illusion that European painters overcome in the 15th century. If the tracks are parallel, then the ball target track and the standing target track will remain two feet apart, for example, no matter how far you go.

Try this experiment so you can see the truth. Take two golf clubs and place them on the ground 20 inches apart. look down......




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