Professional golfers and low handicap swing plane considered one of the most important concepts in golf. Swing plane directly relates to how right, high and far you can hit the ball. At the same time, the swing plane is one of the most intimidating terms for high handicap golfers, simply because they are unsure which is a swing plane, and are not sure what it looks like a good swing plane.
To view a map perfect swing, imagine a dotted line drawn from the ball along the shaft of the club past the grip. This is the line of the plane of swing. As you start running the swing, the club should remain in the same plane as the angle of the imaginary dotted line until the rod is parallel to the ground, or about one quarter of the backswing.
From here, the stick can move slightly above the dotted line while the swing was capped by the action of the arms. This should be natural.
The natural change of direction from backswing to the downswing should drop the suit again on the dotted line so the clubface approaches the ball on the same plane as when we stood in front of the ball. Through impact, the rotation of your forearms kept the club well placed on the line to the end. As you can see, a perfect plane swing has a few up and down, but get used to a consistent level will help maintain a balance and allow to swing aggressively.
Plans Fail The high handicaps due to poor swing mechanics or his misconception about the swing plane, they start rolling their swings at the time of beginning, which immediately puts the club under the swing plane and the dotted line. From this position, the player can only raise the stick to finish the backswing and then going over the top, or above the swing plane during the downswing.

