Joe,
I can't think of anything else to add. The only way that "many of your shot go" is if you are doing something different than what Diagram A shows. I and others have suggested several possible explanations, but it sounds like none of them apply to your situation. If you figure out what you are doing different, please let us know. Most of the shots in your diagram just don't go if you truly aim the center of the CB at the desired OB contact point (assuming your visually alignment is consistent, and assuming you aren't "swooping" your stroke).
Regards,
Dave
I can't think of anything else to add. The only way that "many of your shot go" is if you are doing something different than what Diagram A shows. I and others have suggested several possible explanations, but it sounds like none of them apply to your situation. If you figure out what you are doing different, please let us know. Most of the shots in your diagram just don't go if you truly aim the center of the CB at the desired OB contact point (assuming your visually alignment is consistent, and assuming you aren't "swooping" your stroke).
Regards,
Dave
I do use the contact point to contact point aiming for shots that don’t go. This CB contact point is relative to front dead center of the CB.
The shots described in the diagrams are based on aiming the front dead center (your impact line touching the OB in Figure A) at the contact point as shown in Figure A. It surprises me that many of these shots go when everything and everyone tells me they can't go. I found them in my attempts to learn the limits of using front dead center aiming at the contact point.