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Post by Bear on Nov 13, 2020 10:43:42 GMT -5
I'm totally confused as to beads, on one side of the hole or the other, that don't move at all.
My experience is that sometimes they do nothing to the line of the putt; other times they throw the ball quite a lot.
Anyone have any thoughts as to how to treat these stationary-bead putts?
Thanks
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Post by smith on Nov 13, 2020 12:17:28 GMT -5
I use the lowest camera angle for those putts. Still a few mysterious putts but generally, it's helped spot a few subtle breaks and cut down on the misses.
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Post by Cecil Harvey on Nov 13, 2020 19:03:38 GMT -5
I'm totally confused as to beads, on one side of the hole or the other, that don't move at all. My experience is that sometimes they do nothing to the line of the putt; other times they throw the ball quite a lot. Anyone have any thoughts as to how to treat these stationary-bead putts? Thanks
The angle of the grid lines are what you should look at. The beads are an average of the entirety of one grid box
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Post by smith on Nov 13, 2020 19:59:43 GMT -5
The angle of the grid lines are what you should look at. The beads are an average of the entirety of one grid box Good point. A tip for this is to use zoom to line up the bottom of your monitor/tv with one of the horizontal grid lines - see if they're parallel
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Post by thebu11d0g on Nov 14, 2020 9:33:50 GMT -5
The angle of the grid lines are what you should look at. The beads are an average of the entirety of one grid box This makes sense now reading this as to why I couldn’t figure out why a putt would break left or right when it looked like a straight putt. Thank you SwAeromotion
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Post by ABU_Bear on Nov 14, 2020 9:40:27 GMT -5
The beads lie
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