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- Feb 5, 2021
Try a lat pulldown machine at your gymIs a pullup with the hands facing away? I can't do those. Is there another way to do them?
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Try a lat pulldown machine at your gymIs a pullup with the hands facing away? I can't do those. Is there another way to do them?
Do negatives and work your way up to the big boy club of being able to pull your bodyweight up.Is a pullup with the hands facing away? I can't do those. Is there another way to do them?
Good info. Definitely going to look into getting one sometime soon; tried some of the movements from a youtube guide with a #12 sledgehammer I had sitting around and it's a bit light but definitely puts some strain on my shoulders in a way other weights don't.maces
I think the average number being thrown around has always been 300, 500 definitely is on the higher end of the bulk and I honestly don't think anyone needs a surplus higher than 500, whether enhanced or not, beginner or not.Have you guys experienced any good results from adjusting the typical bulk caloric surplus? Has anyone experimented bulking with 50-100+ instead of 300-500+? Would that just be treading water? It feels like 300-500+ every day is a waste, eating calories that you're not going to use for muscle anyway.
With hands pronated, or facing away, is the pullups, and with hands supinated, or facing toward, is the chinup;Is a pullup with the hands facing away? I can't do those. Is there another way to do them?
Try a lat pulldown machine at your gym
Regarding pullups, even if you can't do them just doing partials will gradually get you the strength you need to do them fully. They've been one of my main no-time-for-gym-today back exercises forever and getting one of those cheap door-mounted pullup bars and just doing some whenever you've got downtime cooking/waiting for the microwave/whatever will get you progression way faster than you'd expect.
Also, try different grips. Hands perpendicular to your body offloads some of the force to your arms, so if you're just barely unable to do normal wide-grip ones you might be able to do those.
Good info. Definitely going to look into getting one sometime soon; tried some of the movements from a youtube guide with a #12 sledgehammer I had sitting around and it's a bit light but definitely puts some strain on my shoulders in a way other weights don't.
Do negatives and work your way up to the big boy club of being able to pull your bodyweight up.
Elastic bands/pullup machines won't help you in progressing to real pullups so much and lat pulldowns aren't as complete of a movement as pullups are, so just start with negatives and just work your way slowly up to the real thing.
Oh yeah, those are great, and mostly does the same thing as pullups (or negatives) do. I think the main issue with them is that they completely take the core out of the equation- just being held up by the pillow on the sliding platform you don't have to stabilize yourself as much- negatives literally are the exact same motion as regular pullups, just without the concentric part. The one advantage these do have going for them is that they make progress easier to quantify- you just move up 2.5/5lbs or whatever on the machine.Fwiw I had very good progress early on with the assisted pullup/chinup/dip machine, the one where you're doing the same movement + range of motion as the regular exercise but kneeling on a sliding platform to offset some of the weight. If you have one available, use it.
Are you asking which one to use at your gym or which one to get for your home?What your guys opinion on wall mounted pull up/dip stations? Are they better than the free standing stations?
5 plates dl/4 plate squat after only six months of lifting? Are you counting by combining the plates on both sides or 5/4 plate each? If the latter, jesus, how much do you weigh to be squatting 405 pounds after half a year?Gentlemen, I have recently hit a somewhat long time goal of deadlifting 5 plates and squatting 4 plates. I'd like to continue progressing, I've only been lifting for six months or so and I'm concerned I'm going to hit the plateau sometime soon. It seems that whenever I had hit a new PB before I was fairly confident based on how hard it was I could do more but these recent ones were a little different, any advice on keeping up the pace?
My lifting partner and I always lift to failure on each set, shooting for 6-12 reps, and go three times a week. I'm also planning on changing my diet to get that recommended 1-1.5 g of protein per KG of weight to help too. What else can I do?
Everything is a pull up bar or dip bar if you're brave. Personally, I think what ever lets you get a better range of motion, and grip is what you should use, forget broscience of this is .00003% better, do what you like.What your guys opinion on wall mounted pull up/dip stations? Are they better than the free standing stations?
Yea, 5/4 plates on each side, 45 lb bar, so dl 495 lbs squat 405 lbs, for what its worth my bench is 265. My lifting friend isn't that far behind me at something like 235/335/415 but he weighs a hundred pounds less than I do, is younger, and lifted in high school. I weigh 260, I've basically been at the same weight the whole time too which I've been optimistically hoping means that I've just been losing fat/gaining muscle at around the same weight and used that as an excuse to be lazy about eating better but trying to change.5 plates dl/4 plate squat after only six months of lifting? Are you counting by combining the plates on both sides or 5/4 plate each? If the latter, jesus, how much do you weigh to be squatting 405 pounds after half a year?
The guy I lift with usually is the one who chooses what exercises we do each day but its back/legs/chest mon/wed/fri, it seems we do a good variety of different exercises so we don't just hit the same stuff every time. I'm not sure that I'd call the gym we go to a powerlifitng gym per se, but its cheap, on the way home from work for us both, and has plenty of weights and machines around. There are definately powerlifting guys who work out there too, do competitions and the like, the ones I've asked are in the 600+ range on DL/500 squat/ high 300s bench but a few also go to another gym around here somewhere with 'calibrated plates' and things like that.Doing compound lifts to failure at your level is a horrible idea, especially if you aren't following a set program
We usually end up nearer the bottom of that range, if we're at 12 or near it we'll add more weight set after set unitl we're more like 6 or 8 and then do a few sets at that weight and then move to another exersise, doing three or four different things per workout.very few novice routines that recommend sets of 12 deadlifts/squats
What level is high enough to move on to a coach, whats the best way to guage that? Certain weight lifted/difficulty advancing?at your level it should be fine, afterwards you can start looking into stuff like Madcow or as I previously advised getting a coach who sets you up for custom programming.
If those are the actual numbers, you both have far above average genetics if this is after half a year of fucking around without a programme, congrats.Yea, 5/4 plates on each side, 45 lb bar, so dl 495 lbs squat 405 lbs, for what its worth my bench is 265. My lifting friend isn't that far behind me at something like 235/335/415 but he weighs a hundred pounds less than I do, is younger, and lifted in high school. I weigh 260, I've basically been at the same weight the whole time too which I've been optimistically hoping means that I've just been losing fat/gaining muscle at around the same weight and used that as an excuse to be lazy about eating better but trying to change.
So you essentially are just doing whatever, it's not great if you want to improve. As I said, you want to pick a routine and stick to it. Here's a few.The guy I lift with usually is the one who chooses what exercises we do each day but its back/legs/chest mon/wed/fri, it seems we do a good variety of different exercises so we don't just hit the same stuff every time. I'm not sure that I'd call the gym we go to a powerlifitng gym per se, but its cheap, on the way home from work for us both, and has plenty of weights and machines around. There are definately powerlifting guys who work out there too, do competitions and the like, the ones I've asked are in the 600+ range on DL/500 squat/ high 300s bench but a few also go to another gym around here somewhere with 'calibrated plates' and things like that.
Yesterday was the right time. If you have one at your gym, hire a (competent, preferably a male with either bodybuilding/powerlifting background or both) personal trainer for like 2-3 weeks, make sure your form is fine and then you can just do your own, chosen routine afterwards with much higher confidence and a lower risk of injury.What level is high enough to move on to a coach, whats the best way to guage that? Certain weight lifted/difficulty advancing?
If anyone is needing a program I don't mind building one for you. I enjoy doing them and used to do them quite a bit up until like last year. No money no strings attached. Just want to give back to the community someway somehow.
From your goal I would probably organize it as so:You're welcome to send one my way if for no reason other than inspiration to mix up my routine. What I'm looking for:
Goal: Get big and strong.
Schedule: 6 days a week.
Current split:
1. Cardio/Core
2. Push
3. Pull
4. Legs
5. Rest
Repeat (So day 6 goes back to 1).
Current target range: 3 sets × 6-10 reps
Things I currently never do: True squats (Various presses only), deadlifts, bench press. I am lowkey afraid of hurting myself with these lol.
Things I need to target better: Arms, rear delts, shoulders. Eat more.