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    Simmons Bilt Samples for Sale

    In Fitness and in Health

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    • Y
      yannis
      Haraki san Expert
      Joined:

      Think about it this way. If you have 2 people at about the same height and one has longer arms than the other, the one one with longer arms has to squat much less to get to a good starting position in a deadlift. The one with short arms has to squat deeper to.get to the same position. Less knee flexion means higher hip position more upright posture and easier pulling.Prime mates are extremely strong pullers because of the outrageous long arms, they can grab stuff without bearly bending.

      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Y
        yannis
        Haraki san Expert
        Joined:

        Another way to visualize it is look at the lockout of the deadlift. If I have very long arms by the time I get to just above the knee am done my body is erect and the bar is hanging from my long arms. If I have trex arms I have to bring the bar almost to my hips to be erect. So the bar from the floor to lock out travels less distance the longer the arms are.

        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • 1WayTrip1
          1WayTrip
          The Unwoven
          Joined:

          My pre-workout has always been a large strong black coffee loaded with honey.

          Enough to blow the cobwebs away without you feeling like crap after.

          Weaseling out of things is important to learn. It's what separates us from the animals... except the weasel.

          last edited by 1WayTrip 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • Y
            yannis
            Haraki san Expert
            Joined:

            @1WayTrip I am with you. I usually workout early in the morning. So yes a cup of black coffee and 2 teaspoons of honey but I don't mix it.

            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • GraemeG
              Graeme
              啓蒙家
              @Giles
              Joined:

              @Giles my coach tends to cycle weights. He'll start me off (for example) deadlifting for six reps, then that will drop that number as the weight increases.

              In your case, you could drop back to 80 kg for six reps, then increase the weight by 2.5 to 5 kg per week until you get back to 100 kg.

              Romanian deadlifts have also proven to be a good accessory. I'm currently performing a set after I've finished the conventional deadlift.

              last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • jdwaidJ
                jdwaid
                Haraki san Prodigy
                @WhiskeySandwich
                Joined:

                @WhiskeySandwich said in In Fitness and in Health:

                @northsouthdenimguy dont forget the cigarettes as an appetite suppressant if you're going for a caloric deficit.

                Beat me to it. Everyone knows a good workout ends with a Marlboro Red 😂

                IG: selvedgelooks

                last edited by northsouthdenimguyN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • northsouthdenimguyN
                  northsouthdenimguy
                  啓蒙家
                  @jdwaid
                  Joined:

                  @jdwaid @WhiskeySandwich

                  Not gonna lie, this was me circa 1992 leaving World’s Gym in Melbourne, Florida. Windows down in my 1979 Porsche 924 because the A/C was dead.

                  Looking back, I’m still not sure what was less healthy: smoking cigarettes after a workout or relying on that 924 engine to get me home. 🤣

                  @selveldgesteps

                  last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • EdHE
                    EdH
                    Iron Heart Deity
                    Joined:

                    @Giles By way of credentials, I used to have a 260kg 1RM deadlift at ~90kg bodyweight. I've dropped the barbell training while the kids are little as it's just much faster to get in and out of the gym if you're doing stuff that doesn't require fiddling about with plates. But I've read the comments and this is what blew up my deadlift when I was into powerlifting-style training and got me from ~100kg to >240kg as a standard "yeah, I can lift that any day of the week" training weight.

                    1. Hook grip. This is when you grip overhand with both hands, but put your thumb roughly parallel to the bar and wrap your fingers around them too. Yes, your thumbs fucking hurt while doing it, but it's a much stronger grip for deadlifting when you get the knack for it and your thumbs have built up a nice callus. (And calloused thumbs just make you feel hardcore.)

                    If you're using lifting straps though and aren't worried about grip training as a side-benefit of the deadlift, then those will be the most secure thing and ignore the hook grip because, like I say, it fucking sucks to do! If you're open to trying it, there are several good tutorials on YouTube.

                    These next two suggestions blew up all my lifts, not just deads:

                    1. Switching to full body workouts, rather than squat-day, bench-day, and deadlift-day. Basically I'd start squat day with squats, then do Accessory Lift 1 from bench day, and Accessory Lift 2 from deadlift day, and so on and so forth for bench day and deadlift day. It might be personal, but I found that this meant the per-workout volume was relatively light for any particular muscle group on any given day, and I could hit all 3 exercises hard, every workout.

                    2. Cycle Light/Medium/Heavy workouts too. For the main 3 lifts, squat, bench and deads, I'd also cycle L/M/H each time I hit the gym. So I'd do Light Squats / Medium Bench / Heavy Deads, then the next trio of workouts would be Medium Squats / Heavy Bench / Light Deads, then Heavy Squat / Light Bench / Medium Deads.

                    Light was working in the 10-12 rep range, Medium was working in the 6-8 rep range, and Heavy was working in the 3-5 rep range. In all cases choosing a weight that left a rep or 2 in reserve at the end of a set.

                    I'd increase weight for any particular day if my total reps across 3 working sets summed to the top end of the rep range. So 36 total reps for a Light day, 24 reps for Medium, and 15 for Heavy was the goal, and if I hit those, I'd up the weight on the next Light Squat (or whatever) day.

                    Combined with #2 above, I found this structure let me really progress with all my lifts.

                    I didn't bother with the L/M/H rota on accessories, just the main 3 lifts. Accessories were just done at a weight that was challenging for 8-12 reps and I'd increase weight once I hit 36 reps over 3 sets.

                    1. You may not need as many warmup reps as you think. With time, I found that dropping reps from my warmup sets meant I was fresher for the working sets but I'd still managed to 'grease the groove' as they say. So if I was aiming for 3x5 at 240kg on deads, I'd warmup by doing 12 reps at 60kg, 8 at 100kg, 5 at 140kg, 3 at 180kg, then just 1 or 2 at 200kg, 1 at 220kg, and 1 at 230kg.

                    2. A proper powerlifting belt is fucking awesome for bracing your core, but might be overkill. I didn't get one until I was deadlifting and squatting 180kg, but it was night and day afterwards. I got the one from SBD, but it's an expensive piece of kit.

                    Take the dive...

                    last edited by EdH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • GilesG
                      Giles
                      IHUK Crew
                      Joined:

                      Thanks a lot Ed

                      "OK face up to it - you're useless but generally pretty honest and straightforward . . . it's a rare combination of qualities that I have come to admire in you" - Geo 2011

                      last edited by EdHE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • EdHE
                        EdH
                        Iron Heart Deity
                        @Giles
                        Joined:

                        @Giles No worries! Kept me distracted from a painful business email I had to write for 25 minutes! I'm sure you'll hit your numbers in no time with a considered approach adapted to whatever you find works best for you.

                        Take the dive...

                        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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