bitterdregs
New member
My whole life I've been unable to benchpress much. I can stack 1200lb on a leg press without training, max out just about any leg machine (at least before my acl surgery), but I've never been able to bench my body weight.
So with my test boost I've gone back to trying upper body work. Unfortunately I don't have a training partner, but even the plain bar wiggles around on me... I wouldn't dare try putting any 45s on it. Yet on the machine press I can reasonably do 200lb.
In the past I've had shoulder and back issues ( sheesh, got the raw deal on the joint tissue gene pool!), but if I can do the weight on the machine, why can't I even approach it on the bench? For the time being I've assumed it's weakness in the ancillary muscles, so I've resorted to high reps on the bar, heavier weight on the machine, and a lot of pushups. But just once I'd like to lie down with something approaching real weight on the bar and hammer out a few reps.
Anyone else deal with this? Any constructive suggestions? Biomechanics-wise I have very long arms... so the lever arm is long for me.
So with my test boost I've gone back to trying upper body work. Unfortunately I don't have a training partner, but even the plain bar wiggles around on me... I wouldn't dare try putting any 45s on it. Yet on the machine press I can reasonably do 200lb.
In the past I've had shoulder and back issues ( sheesh, got the raw deal on the joint tissue gene pool!), but if I can do the weight on the machine, why can't I even approach it on the bench? For the time being I've assumed it's weakness in the ancillary muscles, so I've resorted to high reps on the bar, heavier weight on the machine, and a lot of pushups. But just once I'd like to lie down with something approaching real weight on the bar and hammer out a few reps.
Anyone else deal with this? Any constructive suggestions? Biomechanics-wise I have very long arms... so the lever arm is long for me.