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Is it possible that round moving have more strong impulse?


altaylar2000

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Practice shows that circular movements always give a more powerful blow. For example, a mangual(the type weapons such as a load on a chain, this word seems absent in eng? How it correctly?)  beats more powerful than a hammer. In martial arts, circular strikes are always more powerful than straight ones. There is a feeling that the centrifugal force gives additional energy to the impulse

Edited by altaylar2000
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3 hours ago, altaylar2000 said:

Practice shows that circular movements always give a more powerful blow. For example, a mangual(the type weapons such as a load on a chain, this word seems absent in eng? How it correctly?)  beats more powerful than a hammer. In martial arts, circular strikes are always more powerful than straight ones. There is a feeling that the centrifugal force gives additional energy to the impulse

No.

When you are ready to learn some Physics we will explain it to you.

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1 minute ago, studiot said:

When you are ready to learn some Physics we will explain it to you.

I will not need your(personnally)explanations even if I will be ready to become a Nobel laureate in physics

Is there the button "ignor" here?

Yes, I quickly found it. There is a wonderful interface, very user-friendly

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3 hours ago, altaylar2000 said:

Practice shows that circular movements always give a more powerful blow. For example, a mangual(the type weapons such as a load on a chain, this word seems absent in eng? How it correctly?)  beats more powerful than a hammer. In martial arts, circular strikes are always more powerful than straight ones. There is a feeling that the centrifugal force gives additional energy to the impulse

!

Moderator Note

Is there a question here? Or are you just here to broadcast your imperfect understanding?

(i.e. studiot was not wrong in their assessment)

 
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Yes, question is "why"

2 minutes ago, swansont said:

was not wrong

I prefer experiential science, a positivist approach, rather than a scholastic approach.
The facts are given, and let if someone does not agree, reason in the context of the facts
If someone have another experience let's talk about

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3 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

Higher velocity.

This is not convincing. Not the fact that straight-line movement cannot reach the same speed

2 minutes ago, swansont said:

Establish that it’s true, first. 

I did

Edited by altaylar2000
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Just now, altaylar2000 said:

This is not convincing. Not the fact that straight-line movement cannot reach the same speed

Try throwing a ball with the 2 motions you describe and see which one send the ball farther.

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2 minutes ago, altaylar2000 said:

This is not convincing. Not the fact that straight-line movement cannot reach the same speed

I agree that the potential for speed there is greater due to the increased trajectory, but this does not prove that this is a general case

7 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

Try throwing a ball with the 2 motions you describe and see which one send the ball farther.

according to your logic, if we take a stick equal in length to the nunchaku, then it will be equal in length to the nunchaku strike, but its strike will be weaker in reality

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11 minutes ago, altaylar2000 said:

This is not convincing. Not the fact that straight-line movement cannot reach the same speed

But if you applied actual physics to the problem, you might see the circumstances under which this could and could not happen.

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4 hours ago, altaylar2000 said:

In martial arts, circular strikes are always more powerful than straight ones.

As someone who has both delivered and received such strikes, I can promise you this is also untrue. It is a factor of involvement of hips and shoulders that’s relevant here, not straightness nor curviness of the strike. 

Edited by iNow
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6 minutes ago, altaylar2000 said:

according to your logic, if we take a stick equal in length to the nunchaku, then it will be equal in length to the nunchaku strike, but its strike will be weaker in reality

I simply gave you a possible experiment to try to text your idea.  It is a simple experiment, why not try it?

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3 minutes ago, iNow said:

As someone who has both delivered and received such strikes, I can promise you this is also untrue

In karate and taekwondo, this may be imperceptible due to the fact that they do not deal with blows but with effects and a set of points, but any boxer or thai boxer will confirm this.

 

Edited by altaylar2000
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3 minutes ago, Bufofrog said:

I simply gave you a possible experiment to try to text your idea.  It is a simple experiment, why not try it?

I've tried this. Chain weapon strike is always stronger with the same trajectory

I think this is due to the difference in centrifugal force.

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