Search results for:
- Thoracic Spine mobility
- Hip Flexor Stretching
- Dead Bug with overhead reaching, leg lowering, contralateral, leg lowering
- Bird Dog with OH Reach, LE Reach and Contralateral with breathing
Tens of thousands of people gave up gluten and started feeling better, only it’s starting to look like it wasn’t gluten that was causing the problems. …read more
A program that combines strength-building compound movements with insane muscle-growing giant sets and multiple intensity techniques. …read more
Why are people listening to fat guys who squat 800 pounds but can barely move? The truth is, running (not jogging) has a host of benefits to the weight lifter. …read more
There are plenty of ways to ratchet up the intensity of a set, like forced reps, Tom Platz iso-holds, and rest/pause sets, but you need to apply them in two-week waves. …read more
The Revvll-ution of Rope Climbing!
Rope Climbing can be seen as a model discipline for functional training. Other than training with Battle Ropes, only Rope Climbing Machines offer a comparably intensive workoutsimultaneously demanding strength and endurance. However, looking at the currently available Rope Climbing Machines there is one word coming to mind that describes all of them fittingly:inflexible. Therefore, none of these machines complies with the aerobis philosophy. Anyway, the comparison with rope climbing machines is technically unfair because the revvll ONE does not only work as a rope climbing machine but offers much more than that. This makes for a whole new kind of functional training. We call it Rope Resistance Training.
revvll ONE – the High Climber in Functional Training
The revvll ONE combines all advantages of common rope climbing machines with the typical aerobis characteristics and thus becomes a unique fitness device that simply didn’t exist until now. The revvll is extremely flexible and with a weight of only 5 kg (appr. 11 lb, and that is incl. the rope!) it is unrivaled in its mobility. This creates a multitude of exercises that train a wide variety of muscle groups simultaneously. Strength, endurance, and coordination are all at work during natural push and pull exercises. The versatility of the revvll ONE creates a multidimensional training under constant exertion. The alternating pushing or pulling of the endless rope creates a high time under tension. Your workout will reach new heights of efficiency! During each exercise your muscles are under constant stress which creates a strong blood flow in a short amount of time. This gives you a great “pump” in no time.
Revvll ONE – pulls you in!
The revvll One brings the best out of you! Although, primarily you train your upper extremities with the revvll ONE the core and leg muscles also work during every exercise to maintain a stable stand. And speaking of stand: the position in which you stand relative to the revvll influences your training and gives you manifold exercise variations. You can pull the rope down or you can push it up. Or you push and pull from right to left and the other way around. Whatever motion you can think of – the revvll can do it. You can see, you have so many options that it really is not an overextended assumption when we created the term Rope Resistance Trainingespecially for the revvll ONE!
Unbeatable Mobility and Flexibility
The revvll ONE is a world innovation and a high tech proprietary development by aerobis. An eddy-current brake with rotation discs made of aluminum allows for an adjustable resistance setting in 6 stages, providing for an optimal customizationaccording to your fitness level at all times. The low own weight of under 5 kg (11 lb) including rope makes any setup possible without any problems. The integrated anchor sling lets you fix the revvll to nearly every mounting. The revvll ONE can even be integrated into buddy workouts (see picture). Try to do this with rope climbing machines!
Rope Resistance Training is for everyone
All that can be applied to every product byaerobis can also be applied to the revvll ONE: it fulfills our high quality requirements and is thoroughly tested to the last bolt. The same high quality standards we have for our equipment we also apply to the training with it. And with its innovative design the revvll ONE offers the best conditions for a successful workout. It is flexible, transportable, and costs only a fraction of common rope climbing machines that offer much less. The revvll ONE really is unique. No matter whether you are a beginner, a pro or a personal trainer – the revvll ONE willrevolutionize your training!
Take a look at the training with revvll ONE
It’s that time of the month again…
July’s programming is now available! The Fitness Pain Free Coaching program contains:
- 5-days per week done for you program for yourself or for your gym with a specific mobility routine for your off days
- Learn how to easily screen and assess yourself and your athletes and how to correct these faults
- Warm-ups with mobility specific to the day’s lifting and met-con
- Olympic weightlifting and strength program
- Gymnastics skills work
- Fun and varied daily met-con
- A track for competitors as well as average Joe’s and Jane’s.
- Joint health mobility and injury prevention exercises
I’ve taken your feedback from the past month to tweak things and improve upon the system. Focus for this month:
- More fun and varied met-con. Last month several people asked for more variation in the WODs. I’ve really racked my brain to make these workouts fun and creative.
- More olympic weightlifting in the competitive track. This is the time in the season to start getting really strong. I’ve had feedback from several people that their lifts are constantly improving (Myself included: 245 x 3 overhead squat at 172lbs bodyweight – Reminder I need to eat more). Now it’s time to step it up a notch.
- More variation during met-con for different populations. If your gym’s population is more competitive, you can account for that. Is your gym full of people who want to have fun, get a workout in and stay safe? There’s a track for that. It’s all modifiable.
- A bit more gymnastics in the met-con. You’ve been prepping your gymnastics for some time now. Now we can start incorporating it into our conditioning.
- More specific mobility and joint health exercises.
- Screening and corrections for the front rack
To all of the competitors out there, now is the time to start with your goal setting. Some personal goals for myself:
- 300lb Clean and Jerk
- 235lb Snatch
- 425lb Back Squat
- 345lb …read more
This innovative exercise equipment is now also available as a low-priced vinyl model in a trendy silk mat black look.
The Suples Bulgarian Bag® team – Vinyl is sold in four different weight categories (6 kg, 8 kg, 12 kg, 17 kg) so that everybody will find the right bag for his individual capacities and his physical precondition.
The scope of exercise variations that can be performed with the Suples Bulgarian Bag® team – Vinyl is very versatile: sit-ups, swinging, throwing and lifting exercises can be practiced just as intensive gripping and catching training. Upper body muscles, abdominals and the entire musculoskeletal system can be systematically strengthened.
Each day new exercises can be devised intuitively due to the uncomplicated handling with three integrated grips, the nylon loops, grip stumps and the special, semi-circular form of the bag. Thus the hardest workout will never get boring.
The Suples Bulgarian Bag® team – Vinyl is the perfect personal trainer since it is ideal for training within groups or individually for one’s personal fitness!
IN SHORT:
- Three different types of handles allow athletes to execute exercises by using different grips
(integrated grips, grip stumps, nylon loops)
- The thicker part at the
end of the handle supports the grip and makes the training a
little bit easier for the fitness enthusiast
- The Suples Bulgarian Bag® team – Vinyl is available in 4 weight cate
Most training programs will deliver results, but are those the results you really want? Let’s look at two popular methodologies. …read more
Lifting chains works for bodybuilders for three reasons: 1) They help match the resistance curve of an exercise with the strength curve of a muscle; 2) they prolong the time under tension of an exercise; and 3) they increase the intensity of an exercise. Let’s explore.
A strength curve, or force curve, is a mathematical model that represents how much force an individual can produce at a specific joint angle. This is in contrast to a resistance curve, which is how difficult an exercise is at specific points of the exercise. There are three basic types of strength curves: ascending, descending, and ascending-descending. An ascending strength curve refers to being able to display more force when you extend a joint, a descending strength curve refers to being able to display more force as you flex a joint, and an ascending-descending strength curve means you can display more strength at the midrange position of a joint. Lifting chains are best used for exercises that involve ascending strength curves so that the weight feels lighter as you get close to the end range of the exercise. Examples include squats, deadlifts, bench presses, and military presses.
An example of an exercise that lifting chains would not be good for is the pullup—in fact, one reason so many boot camp programs use kipping pullups is to utilize momentum to complete the movement. But just as doing cheat biceps curls doesn’t necessarily enable you to do strict curls, kipping pullups (done with a hip snap) don’t necessarily translate into strict pullups—plus consider the high levels of stress these Cirque du Soleil movements place on the shoulder joint.
In effect, what lifting chains does is provide variable resistance so you can match the strength curve of a muscle with the resistance curve of the exercise. Before chains became popular, partial movements were often used as a practical way to match the resistance curve of an exercise. For example, because a lifter is stronger at the finish of a deadlift, a powerlifter might perform deadlifts in a power rack with safety rods set up so that the barbell is positioned at knee height. As such, a powerlifter doing a 500-pound deadlift from the floor might be able to use 600 pounds with the bar set at knee height. As such, chains can be considered an “economical exercise,” because rather than having to perform two or more variations of the same exercise, you need to perform only one since the weight of the barbell increases as the chain links are lifted off the floor.
The feedback I get from lifters is that exercises with chains feel “smooth” throughout the entire movement. Another advantage of using chains is that they slow down the concentric portion of the exercise, prolonging the time the muscle is under tension. It has the same effect as doing dropsets, which serve to increase the time a muscle is placed under tension. Generally, to stimulate maximal muscle growth, a muscle needs to be under tension for 40-70 seconds, another important factor in using the variable of workout intensity to your advantage. Intensity is defined according to how much an individual can lift in relation to how much weight they can lift for one repetition. High levels of intensity are necessary to work the fast-twitch muscle fibers, which must be activated for a bodybuilder to achieve the highest levels of muscular hypertrophy. Because lifting chains increases the amount of weight lifted during certain portions of an exercise, the intensity of the exercise is higher.
Chains also help trainees squat lower. If you want to achieve maximal muscle size in your lower extremities, you need to squat rock-bottom. Chains work on your subconscience to get you to squat lower, because the weight feels lighter as you go deeper. As a general guideline, you want to use chains that are roughly 10% of the barbell weight (bar + plates + collars). So if the loaded barbell weight is 100 kilos (220 pounds), each chain should weigh 10 kilos (22 pounds). But don’t get too detail-oriented—even a 15% chain will do.
In my opinion dips are the quickest way to massive triceps. What, no pressdowns? Have you looked at the triceps of powerlifters and strongman competitors recently? They are plenty massive, and very few of those guys waste their time on pressdowns. Or look at gymnasts—they have massive triceps developed from many reps of dips and pressing motions. Yet, like the very demanding squats and chins, dips rarely make it into other fitness magazines—you know, the ones where the model always purses his lips for the picture. Too bad, because electromyography studies clearly show that dips activate the greatest amount of motor units in the triceps brachii.
To start the exercise, hold the handle bar and boost yourself until you are stabilized at arm’s length over the handles, then lower your body as far as possible in between the bars; during this eccentric portion of this exercise you want to lower your body until your biceps make contact with your forearms—your triceps must get fully stretched. Once you reach the bottom position, press yourself back up by extending the elbows; try to stay as upright as possible throughout the range of motion. Don’t lean too far forward because this will increase the recruitment of the pectoralis muscles.
If you can’t lower yourself under control until the biceps make contact with the forearms, go back to collecting stamps—or you can perform the decline close-grip bench press until your elbow extension strength is sufficient. Doing an incomplete range in triceps dips is a complete waste of your time. And please do not go for the El Dweebo version, where you put your feet on a bench in front of you and put your hands behind you. That exercise, along with Smith machine pressing exercises, is one of the major causes of shoulder impingement syndromes in the bodybuilding community.
At first your body weight will probably suffice as the sole means of resistance. As you get stronger, you can increase the resistance by holding a dumbbell between your legs or hooking a plate or dumbbell onto a specialized chin/dip belt. There are many variations of chin/dip belts on the market, and in my opinion, most of them are not worth the money. I have always had the policy of “buy once, and for life.” That is how high the quality of what you buy should be. Tree-climbing belts are the best choice, and they are designed to take the stress off the hips.
If you have access to the better V-shaped dipping bars, use as narrow a grip as possible, without compromising shoulder integrity, of course. And please, do not cheat yourself by doing chopped reps by not going all the way down, and by coming up only three-quarters of the way. By the same token, your elbows should go to only 98% of elbow extension to maintain maximal tension on the triceps. A great way to enhance the return on your investment in dips is to use chains to match the strength curve. Since dips have an ascending strength curve, you want more weight in the fully contracted position than in the stretched position. As you extend the arms, more chain links come off the floor, hence increasing the resistance on the triceps.