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(Continued from Part 2)
It can be seen that a squared putter face at the moment of impact with the golf ball is of much more importance versus the path of the putter, as it seems that the path of the putter head is of little importance, as seen in Experiment #1 and #2.
In Experiment #1, the putter head path was good, but the putt missed because the putter face was off and not squared at impact. The ball basically took off in the direction where the putter face was pointing.
A good stroke path cannot fix a bad face angle.
In Experiment #2, the putter path was way off about 40 degrees to the right of the target line, but the putt was made because the putter face was squared at impact.
A good and squared putter face at impact can fix a bad putter stroke path.
The precise ratio of importance between clubface angle and clubhead path will be discussed later, as the ratio is different depending of the club from putter to the driver. For the putter, the ratio can be taken as 90 to 95 percent important for face angle versus only 5 to 10 percent important for the putter head stroke path. For the driver, the average ratio is 70 percent important for face angle versus 30 percent important for the driver swing path for an advanced player. (For the big slicer, driver swing path becomes up to 90 percent important versus driver face angle.)
A lot of work to get the putter face as squared as possible at ball impact to the start of the target line can increase the making of medium and long putts.
One method is the use of guide lines on the ball to help making putts. In the old days, the ball-name label imprinted on the ball can be used as the putting guide line. Now, a long line is drawn around the ball to serve as a long putting guide line, as seen on television broadcasts of PGA golf tournaments. Most times, the guide line, or ball-name label is set inline with the starting part of the target line.

Figure 3-1.
Figure 3-1 shows the ball-name label set inline with the initial part of the target line, so as to served as a guide line for the putting stroke. For a flat and straight putt, the ball-name guide line serves to point in the direction of the hole.
Less seen is to place the ball with the ball-name label squared to the start of the target line, as shown in Figure 3-2 below:

Figure 3-2.
In Figure 3-2 the ball-name label is set squared to the starting part of the target line. This set up of the ball-name guide line is to encourage returning the putter face to the same squareness as the ball-name at the moment of ball impact.
Because squareness of putter face at impact is ninety percent or more of importance, logic implies that the ball guide line be set squared to the target line as in Figure 3-2 for over ninety percent of putting practice to improve the squareness of clubface at impact with ten percent of practice with the ball-name label, or drawn guide line on the ball set inline with the target line to improve the stroke path.
From a previous blog, the theoretical allowable deviation of putter face from square at impact is calculated as the arctangent of golf hole radius divided by the length of the putt. For a short straight putt on flat and smooth surface, the putter face is to be no more than one degree off at impact. For a medium putt, less than half a degree deviation from square is allowed for making the putt. For long putts, less than one-third degree of deviation from square at impact is allowed. For very long putts, deviations of less than one-tenth, one-hundredth, and so forth may be called for, although it is probably beyond achievable to consistently maintain deviations from square to such tiny fractions of a degree. These precision is in the realm of surgeons who can cut off a single layer of cell tissues.
The are many systems to get the putter face as squared as possible at impact. Whole books may be written on this single topic. There is even mathematics that can be used to putt in “hyper-space” where in sci-fi movies, long distances of many light years can traveled as short distances in hyper-space. Putting in hyper-space can make 30 or more feet putts almost as easy as a two feet putt.
While putter stroke path is of much less importance, it can still decide whether a long putt is made or not. Here too many articles and books are available for increasing the precision of the putting stroke.
Before delving further into this topic, judging and controlling putting distance will be discussed in the next blogs.
Name a few of the hundreds of articles and books that show how to make precise impact. I missed them when I did years of looking.