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hurricaneypa
Jul 07, 2007, 11:31 AM
hello bodyweight culturist,this my first post and contirbution to this forum,here is an article about how to master the pull up using the principle of progression.i recieved it by email,is from Mejia one of the writer column for men's health.

Enjoy.

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Master the Pullup
Use this Personalized Plan to Conquer a Classic

People avoid pullups for mostly one reason: They're hard. And if you can't do even one, it's embarrassing to just hang there. Memories of seventh-grade gym class, matchstick arms, and laughing classmates aren't easily forgotten.
But if you can't complete at least 10 in a row with perfect form, or haven't boosted your total by three or four in the past year, you're missing out. The pullup is the best way to work the biggest muscle group in your upper body: your latissimus dorsi. If you're not improving, they're not growing.

The solution? Use our custom guide to crossing the bar. Because the pullup is a body-weight exercise, it requires a different approach than the bench press and arm curl.

Instead of adjusting the amount of weight you lift to match your workout -- as you would with free-weight or machine exercises -- you'll adjust your workout based on your ability. So the number of pullups you can do will dictate the routine you follow. This ensures that you're always using the right pullup plan for you -- whether you can already pump out double-digits or can't yet manage a single one.

The result: You'll have a better body -- and the ghosts of junior high will finally be laid to rest.

Test Your Limit
Before you get started, determine how many pullups you can do.

Here's the drill: Hang from a pullup bar using an overhand grip that's just beyond shoulder-width apart, your arms completely straight. Cross your feet behind you. Without moving your lower body, pull yourself as high as you can; your chin should rise above the bar. Pause momentarily, then lower your body until your arms are straight, and repeat.

Record your total, then find the pullup routine below that corresponds to your best effort. Do that workout twice a week, resting at least 2 days between sessions.

After 4 weeks, retest yourself. Depending on your score, either advance to the next workout or repeat the same routine for another 4 weeks.


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Your Best Effort: 0 to 1

The problem: You're not strong enough to lift your body weight.

The fix: Turn your weakness into an advantage with heavy "negatives." Doing only the lowering portion of an exercise with a heavier weight than you can lift is a fast way to build strength.

How to do it: First, a couple of definitions.

- Chinup: This is the same movement as a pullup, but you'll use a shoulder-width, underhand grip. Because your biceps are more involved, it's a little easier than the pullup.

- Neutral-grip pullup: Again, it's the same basic movement, but you'll grip the parallel bars of the pullup station so your palms are facing each other. This is harder than a chinup, but not as hard as a pullup.

Now follow the workout schedule below, using this method of performing negatives: Place a bench under a pullup bar and use it to boost your body so your chin is above the bar. Then take the prescribed amount of time -- either 5 to 6 seconds or 8 to 10 seconds -- to lower your body. Once your arms are straight, jump back up to the top position and repeat. Rest for 60 seconds after each set.

Week 1: Chinup : 3 sets : 5–6 reps : 5–6 seconds

Week 2: Neutral- grip pullup : 3 sets : 5–6 reps : 5–6 seconds

Week 3: Neutral- grip pullup : 2 sets : 5–6 reps : 8–10 seconds

Week 4: Pullup : 2 sets : 5–6 reps : 8–10 seconds



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Your Best Effort: 2 to 4

The problem: You can't do enough repetitions to fully develop your mind-muscle connection, limiting your ability to become stronger.

The fix: Do more sets of fewer repetitions. The reason: The first one or two repetitions in a set are the "highest quality" ones, meaning that's when the most muscle fibers fire. By doing several sets of one or two repetitions, you'll activate more total fibers and better develop the communication pathways between your brain and muscle -- increasing strength quickly.

How to do it: Take the number of pullups you can complete and divide it by two. That's how many repetitions you'll do each set. (If your best effort is three, round down to one.) Follow the workout routine below, doing the number of sets indicated and resting for the prescribed amount of time after each. Note that after 2 weeks, you'll increase the repetitions you do in each set.

Week 1: 8 sets : 50% of best effort : 90 seconds rest

Week 2: 8 sets : 50% of best effort : 60 seconds rest

Week 3: 8 sets : Best effort : 90 seconds rest

Week 4: 8 sets : Best effort : 60 seconds rest



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Your Best Effort: 5 TO 7

The problem: You have strength but lack muscular endurance.

The fix: Focus on doing more total repetitions than normal -- regardless of the number of sets it takes. For instance, instead of doing three sets of six, for a total of 18 repetitions, you'll shoot for 30 repetitions -- even if that means you have to drop down to sets of three, two, or one. This will rapidly improve your muscular endurance.

How to do it: Perform as many pullups as you can, then rest for 60 seconds. Repeat as many times as needed to do 30 repetitions. Each workout, try to reach your goal in fewer sets.



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Your Best Effort: 8 TO 12

The problem: You're too strong for your body weight.

The fix: Make yourself heavier by doing pull-ups with added weight. You'll boost your absolute strength, which increases the number you can do with just your body weight.

How to do it: Attach a weight plate to a dipping belt and strap it around your waist. (If you're not at a gym or it doesn't have one, you can hold a dumbbell between your ankles.) Use a weight that's about 5 percent to 10 percent of your body weight, just enough so you'll be doing only two or three fewer repetitions than your best effort. Do four or five sets, resting 60 seconds after each.

Mejia, M.S. MensHealth.com

bladerunner
Aug 02, 2007, 04:22 PM
I'm gonna start on this today. Great post.

macon
Oct 01, 2007, 10:27 AM
I followed the first level of this program faithfully for the required four weeks and I improved my best effort from one pull up to three pull ups (Admittedly, I was in bad shape at the beginning). I will move on to the next phase and see if I can keep the improvement going.

hurricaneypa
Oct 02, 2007, 08:01 PM
yeah now im nearly on it for 2month and i already boosted my pullups by 3.
i went from hardly 3 to 6pullups now and more coming in the way.
i'll keep in tune.

Fatman
Oct 06, 2007, 09:52 AM
I did something like 60 pullups yesterday, broken down into sets of 5 (until 50, then just did ones and twos for a while). My muscular endurance is pretty low as I mostly train for absolute strength. I can definitely feel them in my lats and biceps today. Might add more of these pullup days in the future. My current best is around 12 from dead hang.

NeilC
Oct 10, 2007, 02:03 PM
I like it up to this this: "Make yourself heavier by doing pull-ups with added weight. You'll boost your absolute strength, which increases the number you can do with just your body weight."

olinek
Oct 10, 2007, 11:35 PM
Why don't you like that statement. It is true. If you have hit a plateau at 10 bodyweight pull ups, then you start adding weight till let's say you can 10 with 10 lbs, you should be able to crank out more than 10 bodyweight ones.

NeilC
Oct 11, 2007, 08:58 AM
Because it's not an efficient way to train. it sounds like it should work and of course there will be a little bit of crossover but it's not the way to attack the problem. Sure do some heavy training to get over sticking points etc but the way to do lots of pullups is to do lots of pullups.

If you get to say 15 pullups and you can't manage the 16th then the problem is not one of lack of strength, it's lack of strength/endurance. To get that endurance you need to train the muscles and surroung tissues to deliver the nutrients and expel the waste etc over larger numbers of reps. That is done by doing lots of reps. Strength is not the issue. It's about adapting to the specific demands imposed.

You could be strong enough to bench 400lbs but that wouldn't help all that much with being able to do 100 pushups. It's a different skill.

Fatman
Oct 11, 2007, 02:07 PM
Because the bench press is fundamentally different than the pushup.

While the weighted pullup isn't really that different from the regular pullup.

So the above commented statement is valid. If you increase your bench press from 200 to 250, you'll be able to squeeze out more reps at 185 than you previously could (even though you didn't train repetitions at 185, only your one-rep maximum). Therefore adding weight to the pullup would help you add rps to your unweighted pullups. Pavel Tsatsouline quotes the same principle in his work.

NeilC
Oct 12, 2007, 06:41 AM
You might be able to squeeze out another rep or two - obviously there is some crossover between reps/KG but it's not a great strategy for training for high reps. If you check out the training programs for record holding pullup or pressup guys you will see that weighted vest work is not a major part of their program. They design their training so they do a LOT of reps, split up into sets pretty regularly. Much like the earlier part of the programme which makes more sense.

I also know it from personal experience. When I used to train for bulk I used to weight my pullups. Instead of doing 3 sets of 10 pullups I'd do say sets of 6-8 with a dumbell between my legs. The weights got larger and larger and the muscles on my back popped out nicely. But my max pullups did not go up much, if at all. When I tried Zeb's training programme over at T-nation, I increased my pullups by about 40% in a few months. Zeb competes in little local competitions and is a reasonably built guy (190lbs if I remember correctly) who at nearly 50 yrs old can do 32 odd pulls.

anomoly
Oct 14, 2007, 03:32 AM
this is GREAT stuff! does this work for push-ups too?

Danny Fiasco
Oct 14, 2007, 04:06 AM
If you added the weight, retested yourself like at the start of the program with that weight, and then followed the training regime, wouldn't you get the same results as just bodyweight pull-ups?

NeilC
Oct 14, 2007, 05:45 AM
If you added the weight, retested yourself like at the start of the program with that weight, and then followed the training regime, wouldn't you get the same results as just bodyweight pull-ups?

What do you mean by results exactly? Are you asking if you could reach the same numbers weighted as unweighted, if you followed the programme? Or something else?

Danny Fiasco
Oct 14, 2007, 10:26 PM
What do you mean by results exactly? Are you asking if you could reach the same numbers weighted as unweighted, if you followed the programme? Or something else?

I was thinking that you'd be able to achieve the same number of reps as with unweighted while building strength and endurance.

NeilC
Oct 15, 2007, 05:34 AM
You will never do as many reps weighted as you will unweighted.

But you'd definately build more strength and muscle.

anomoly
Oct 17, 2007, 04:23 PM
great info

macon
Oct 26, 2007, 10:04 AM
Update:

I'm up to doing 4 pull ups pretty comfortably (5 or 6 if I really push it). These are from a dead hang at the bottom to my chin over the bar at the top.

Just a few weeks ago, I couldn't have done 2 complete pull ups to save my life.

Onward and upward.

Chris41279
Oct 30, 2007, 09:11 PM
Quite a well put together post bud, very informative IMO! Now just to find a place in my house i can do pull ups off of. I used to be able to do it off JUST the over hang of the door frame (like 1/2" - 3/4") with just my fingers holding me up. But the place im in now i can't even get a grip on it without the framework feeling like its going to snap under my measly 160 lbs

edsaws
Nov 02, 2007, 01:31 AM
This sounds like a plan I'm going to give a try. Seeing how I can't really do one good pull up. I'll keep posting on my results.

macon
Nov 26, 2007, 01:00 PM
Update:

I must admit that I've stopped faithfully following this program for the present time. Once I got to the point where the program called for 30 reps in as many sets as it required, I found myself cheating with my form (not descending to a dead hang and not getting my chin over the bar) just to get to 30. Instead, I've started using a "pyramid" method, where I do sets of varying reps in this order: 1-2-3-4-3-2-1 (although, now, I'm up to 1-2-3-4-4-3-2-1). I've been able to maintain proper form throughout the pyramid and have increased my best effort.

My current best effort is now 7.

edsaws
Nov 26, 2007, 02:50 PM
Macon 7 pull ups isn't to shabby. I'm going into the 4th week still looking to get a good rep or 2. I'll give it a go later in the week to check on my progress. I have to admit the negative hang is a lot easier now.

macon
Nov 27, 2007, 09:36 AM
Thanks, edsaws. Just keep at it. Any improvement is a step in the right direction. Onward and upward.

OK. I've got another confession:

Over the last 3 months, as I've been exercising and eating healthier, I've lost about 18 lbs. So, I'm really having to lift less and less weight. I guess you could say I'm "cheating" a little.

Nah. ;)

edsaws
Nov 27, 2007, 03:52 PM
Cheating, hell losing some poundage is one of the reasons I'm doing this. Well I checked my progress today. 1 good pullup and 3 chinups. Not the best but I'll keep at it. I can only get better.

hurricaneypa
Dec 02, 2007, 10:09 AM
here are my progress after more than 3month period in that program,normally i just do it 2 times each week as supplementary session,and now i can do 4sets of 4reps with attached weight of 10,1pounds with 40seconds rest betweens.

peace