yes of course
That's only true when the body is dropped from some height. In that case, its speed keeps increasing until it hits the ground, so that's when it's speed is the greatest, and more speed means more kinetic energy. If you fire a bullet, a golf ball, or a canonball horizontally, then its kinetic energy can easily be greater when it leaves the muzzle or the club-face than it is when the projectile hits the ground.
Turn your hips, coil the body, swing harder.
Get your mate to use a stop watch at the beginning and end of your swing. Then calculate the speed.
The swing is about timing and tempo. As we each have our own inner clock, the swing speed will depend on the individual making it. It is important to maintain good balance when making the swing, as well as acceleration thru the ball. Your speed at contact should be somewhere between 75 and 85% at contact , leaving you 15 to 25% of acceleration after contact.
Swing Vision works by providing a combination of multiview high speed video with dynamic sEMG synchronized and recorded on the display. Basically it is a high swing camera attached to you watching your body while you are swinging the golf club.
Very interesting question, although impossible to answer. What was the swing speed and what club was it?
No, only when it falls off the tee, without a club stroke. That's not the way to play!
no, your club can't be grounded or touch ground when you are in a hazard. I forget where this is said in the rules but it is there.
The F shaft is popular with Cobra drivers. It is part of a set of 3 shafts, the X, F and M. The X (extreme ball speed), F (fast ball speed) and M (medium ball speed) shafts are designed to tailor your club to your swing, based on your ball speed and swing speed. The F shaft in particular is the middle ground of these three shafts.
It is imposible for me to tell you how stiff a shaft you should use because I don't know your swing speed. Golfers who swing the club at a faster speed in the downswing (faster swing peed) will require a stiffer, and possibly heavier shaft, whereas a golfer with a slower swing speed may need a more flexible and possibly lighter shaft. Depending on how serious you are about golf, you may want to get a club fitting. If you do this a golf professional will help you find the
that is the perfect swing speed for the standard stiff shafted club. try the dynamic gold s300 shaft or the project x 5.5 or 6. the kbs tour stiff is good as well.
The word is swing. Golfers swing the golf club. Children play on a swing at the playground.