User 105
Journeyman Pro
I've been thinking about this for a while and would be interested in others views.
We all now we have access to swing analysis tools that were once only in the domain of a teaching pro. There are various cheap tools available for us to use. Ranging from Iphone and Android apps to PC apps like V1 Home and GASP etc. And a good range of cheapish camera's you can get from Casio that will capture at high fps so you can see every nuance of your swing.
All will let you record you're swing in much the same way a pro does with his fancy set-up and then analyse you're faults.
All sounds good right ?
I use V1, a High Speed Casio Camera. I also use my iPhone. All to do the above.
But I have some concerns.
Is diagnosing you're own swing faults and and fixing it yourself a sensible idea ?
I had a long chat with my pro about this the other week and he pointed out that a lot of people will try to fix the symptom and not the cause of the problem.
Without in depth PGA professional type training you'll actually be doing more harm than good.
Now I'm all for using technology when it is beneficial. I've stopped trying to fix my own faults and only use the software to work on things my pro has asked me to. Mainly so I can check if I'm doing what I think I'm doing.
But surly using this technology unguided is a bad thing unless you really know what you are doing ?
What do you guys think ?
We all now we have access to swing analysis tools that were once only in the domain of a teaching pro. There are various cheap tools available for us to use. Ranging from Iphone and Android apps to PC apps like V1 Home and GASP etc. And a good range of cheapish camera's you can get from Casio that will capture at high fps so you can see every nuance of your swing.
All will let you record you're swing in much the same way a pro does with his fancy set-up and then analyse you're faults.
All sounds good right ?
I use V1, a High Speed Casio Camera. I also use my iPhone. All to do the above.
But I have some concerns.
Is diagnosing you're own swing faults and and fixing it yourself a sensible idea ?
I had a long chat with my pro about this the other week and he pointed out that a lot of people will try to fix the symptom and not the cause of the problem.
Without in depth PGA professional type training you'll actually be doing more harm than good.
Now I'm all for using technology when it is beneficial. I've stopped trying to fix my own faults and only use the software to work on things my pro has asked me to. Mainly so I can check if I'm doing what I think I'm doing.
But surly using this technology unguided is a bad thing unless you really know what you are doing ?
What do you guys think ?