The Jut da punch is always above the other hand, because the wooden dummy cannot move. Also, this Jut da in second section is actually one hand covers two. Your opponent's body often goes down. Which means that you need to punch a bit lower, otherwise you cannot hit your opponent.
I see what he means about that first PAK SET on set 3. He covers, he FUNG HAO and JUT and PUNCH. When it’s an arm in a fight though, the arm drops, and the punch is above, higher. On the dummy it looks like a chop high and punch low. But in reality, it’s a total system of control all the way around the arm. And the other thing was, if you’re going to PAK pak deep. Go for the weak point. Use cover on the wrist. Use PAK SAO deeper pinning the elbow/forearm. If I’m correct. Or else it makes it easy for the opponent to take the hand back and use it or his elbow.
if you suppose to put your hand on the ellbow than it never can be deep on the wooden dummy cuz the distance to hit the body or face is to short. so you can not have distance managment. Nobody has those short arms. so ends of the wooden dummy are the ellbows cuz its trapping distance and not grappling or boxing distance.
Interesting analysis. In our system, the ends of the dummy arms represent the hands. The length of the dummy's arms are not meant to be a literal representation of a human arm.
The Jut da punch is always above the other hand, because the wooden dummy cannot move. Also, this Jut da in second section is actually one hand covers two. Your opponent's body often goes down. Which means that you need to punch a bit lower, otherwise you cannot hit your opponent.
Nicely stated. Thanks for watching.
I see what he means about that first PAK SET on set 3. He covers, he FUNG HAO and JUT and PUNCH. When it’s an arm in a fight though, the arm drops, and the punch is above, higher. On the dummy it looks like a chop high and punch low. But in reality, it’s a total system of control all the way around the arm. And the other thing was, if you’re going to PAK pak deep. Go for the weak point. Use cover on the wrist. Use PAK SAO deeper pinning the elbow/forearm. If I’m correct. Or else it makes it easy for the opponent to take the hand back and use it or his elbow.
I'm always impressed by your thorough understanding of the techniques and principles presented in the videos.
@@GaryLamWingChunKungFu he's my absolute favorite. 😁💯
@@JKDVIPER You are a very wise man.
I'm thinking the WSL lineage has the complete Yip Man understanding of mechanics and application.
@@nathancowans5607 somebody think IP Ching lineage is prefect
if you suppose to put your hand on the ellbow than it never can be deep on the wooden dummy cuz the distance to hit the body or face is to short. so you can not have distance managment. Nobody has those short arms. so ends of the wooden dummy are the ellbows cuz its trapping distance and not grappling or boxing distance.
Interesting analysis. In our system, the ends of the dummy arms represent the hands. The length of the dummy's arms are not meant to be a literal representation of a human arm.
Dope