Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Yes your bulging discs are doing a great job of that. Strengthening doesn't fix bad form, correcting with proper technique does. I'm not avoiding any weakness here...the back and core get worked just as much in my method, only less susceptible to injury because it's a stricter movement.

My 2c on this one for what it is worth , from past experience.

You have a point about stabillity, thats why sitting or bending the knees with a relatively lighter weight is a good place to start in terms of 'balance'.

However, once you are over a certain weight (body weight for sure) you basically need to have lots of stabilisation all the way up. So legs to core to shoulder girdle ,even wrists. Each of these should not be troubled and totally up to the task before going crazy. They are supporting muscles so should have more than you need to balance and stabilise as the shoulder press should not be used to target them.

Even if you bend your knees or sit, not enough shoulder stabilisation or core strength will see you get an injury with bigger weight.

However , I think where Ghosty and Husky33 are comming from is; once you are lifting strong across those areas a bodyweight press with locked legs won't trouble you.

In the mean time, best practice is as you said ' slight bend in the knees' or sit down and for the safest plan use a lighter weight if you don't have the confidence to press.bodyweight yet.

Edited by rev210

160 as of tonight! And weighing in at 79.7kg...that's double bodyweight :D

165...somebody stop me! Head started spinning as soon as I locked it out :S

Gotta run out of steam soon; at this rate I'm adding 10kg per week.

Yes your bulging discs are doing a great job of that.

My back injury wasn't caused from MP, it was caused from overzealous DL'ing with bad form, which in my defence, I was fairly new to lifting back then and lacked the experience to know better - some of us just have to learn the hard way unfortunately. Hindsight is a wonderful thing...

Strengthening doesn't fix bad form, correcting with proper technique does.

Generally yes, but also no. Correcting technique doesn't automatically make you strong, you still have to train... and think about what 'form' is for a moment. Correct 'form' is generally the most efficient way to perform a movement or action, that doesn't mean it is automatically safe, for example, if a novice overloads the bar and tries the lift with "good form", injury may still occur because they are weak. On the flip side, doing movements in "bad form" but in a controlled manner to build strength in compromised position/less-efficient movement, aids in strengthening the movement when done in correct form, for example, "good mornings" to assist squats etc.

I'm not avoiding any weakness here...the back and core get worked just as much in my method, only less susceptible to injury because it's a stricter movement.

I disagree. CBF explaining why but as a simple test, try and do your seated press weights standing and tell me which is harder.

I don't do seated press, I do standing behind neck shoulder press...with split legs and knees slightly bent. My back stays strict throughout the whole set and I do 50kg x 10 for 3 sets + 55kg x 6 for 3 sets, so not that light.

I don't do seated press, I do standing behind neck shoulder press...with split legs and knees slightly bent. My back stays strict throughout the whole set and I do 50kg x 10 for 3 sets + 55kg x 6 for 3 sets, so not that light.

that's light

Hey, I probably couldn't do 60kgx10 atm, but i will be the first to admit that it is light. And the only reason it is light is because i don't train it as much as everything else, like yourself, and 99% of people.

It's actually pathetic when you look how much higher my bench is.

I don't do seated press, I do standing behind neck shoulder press...with split legs and knees slightly bent. My back stays strict throughout the whole set and I do 50kg x 10 for 3 sets + 55kg x 6 for 3 sets, so not that light.

it's not light for the conditioning goals you have but, it's really quite light if you are talking a standing press at your weight. Again only relative to people who care to lift heavy as their goal.

I'm sure you could train to do heavier if you wanted to but, you are doing what is best for your goals. You don't need to shovel huge weights on the shoulders without good reasons anyway.

I was the same up until 165kg lol, that was my figurative brick wall. I think my grip failed on 170kg at the same point I couldn't really complete the lift, and have only attempted it once.

Good work Birds, keep dat shit up!

Hey, I probably couldn't do 60kgx10 atm, but i will be the first to admit that it is light. And the only reason it is light is because i don't train it as much as everything else, like yourself, and 99% of people.

It's actually pathetic when you look how much higher my bench is.

it's not light for the conditioning goals you have but, it's really quite light if you are talking a standing press at your weight. Again only relative to people who care to lift heavy as their goal.

I'm sure you could train to do heavier if you wanted to but, you are doing what is best for your goals. You don't need to shovel huge weights on the shoulders without good reasons anyway.

It's not light in that the potential for injury is very much there should you use bad form, which is why I brought up what I lift for that exercise in the first place. It's like a 100kg deadlift - nothing in the scheme of lifting and what people are capable of, but you can still do a lot of damage if your form is out.

I was the same up until 165kg lol, that was my figurative brick wall. I think my grip failed on 170kg at the same point I couldn't really complete the lift, and have only attempted it once.

Good work Birds, keep dat shit up!

For someone with a spinal injury, that's a great lift! My grip felt like it had more in it, but 165kg was the first time my back had to put in a lot of effort to get the weight up / started running out of steam. Grip seems to be fine for 1RM stuff, it's the sets of 10 where sweat builds up and resetting my reps turns it to shit, even with much lower weights.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Latest Posts

    • just an update to this, poor man pays twice  Tried sanding down the pulleys but it didnt do the trick. Chucked another second hand alternator in the na car which I got for free off my mate and its fixed the squelling. Must have been unlucky with the bearings.    As for my turbo car, I managed to pick up a cwc rb alternator conversion bracket + LS alternator for 250 off marketplace, looked to be in really good nick. Installed it , started the car and its not charging the battery.... ( Im not good with auto elec stuff so im not sure if this was all I needed to do but I verified such by using a multimeter on the battery when the engine was running and I was only getting 12.2v )   I had to modify the earth strap for the new LS alternator , factory earth strap was a 10mm bolt which did not fit the bolt on the LS alternator which was double the size so I cut it off , went to repco bought some ring terminals that fit, crimped it onto the old earth strap and bolted it up to the alternator , started the car and same issue. Ran like shit and was reading 12.2 at the battery.  For a "plug and play" advertised kit thats not very plug and play but alas.  My question is , am I missing something ? Ive been reading that some people recommend upgrading the stock 80 amp alternator fuse to a 140 amp but I dont see how that would stop the alternator charging especially at idle not under load.  Regardless ive pulled it out and am going to get it bench tested by an auto elec tomorrow but it would be handy to know if ive missed something silly or have done something wrong.   
    • My wild guess is that you have popped off an intake pipe....check all of the hoses between the turbo and the throttle for splits or loose clamps.
    • Awesome, thanks for sharing!
    • To provide more specific help, more information is needed. What Android screen? What is its wiring diagram? Does the car's wiring have power at any required BAT and ACC wires, and is the loom's earth good?
    • So, now all you need to do is connect the 2 or 3x 12v feeds into the unit to permanent 12v, ACC 12V and IGN 12V that you can find in the spot behind the stereo, and the earth, and then it will switch on with the car.
×
×
  • Create New...