Originally posted by Ion Beza
The rotary style becomes such at at least 90 degrees.
TI doesn't address this, TI says to bring both arms in front (0 degrees) before one starts to pull.
The border between the two styles must be somewhere, and arbitrarily is set at 90.
Ion, once again you have criticized someone else for your own misunderstanding.
I dug up an old copy of TI, and found this:
FQS (front quadrant swimming) means always keeping one or the other of your hands in the front quadrant. ... Leave your right hand out in front while the left is stroking, then begin stroking the right just as the left returns to the front quadrant, and so on.
Let's see... If my right hand is out in front, and my left hand has just passed my shoulder to enter the front quadrant, that is almost 90 degrees, not 0. That may explain why you had trouble swimming fast while teaching yourself (with incomplete knowledge) Total Immersion.
Originally posted by Ion Beza
The rotary style becomes such at at least 90 degrees.
TI doesn't address this, TI says to bring both arms in front (0 degrees) before one starts to pull.
The border between the two styles must be somewhere, and arbitrarily is set at 90.
Ion, once again you have criticized someone else for your own misunderstanding.
I dug up an old copy of TI, and found this:
FQS (front quadrant swimming) means always keeping one or the other of your hands in the front quadrant. ... Leave your right hand out in front while the left is stroking, then begin stroking the right just as the left returns to the front quadrant, and so on.
Let's see... If my right hand is out in front, and my left hand has just passed my shoulder to enter the front quadrant, that is almost 90 degrees, not 0. That may explain why you had trouble swimming fast while teaching yourself (with incomplete knowledge) Total Immersion.