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Weight exercises for back muscles

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  • solomon
    replied
    In youtube there is video

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  • jackbilbow
    replied
    Hi... just like one of our friends said. Bench declining, running, jogging are the exercises to back muscles, without lifting weights. But be cautious when doing. Take care of your health. Thanks for sharing with us.

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  • Marksmarkou
    replied
    Chins, rows and deadlifts are my favourite for back development. Deadlifts are probably in my eyes the best movement in the gym. They bulk up your back, produce the most strength possible and also work your cardiovascular endurance.

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  • Middleweight
    replied
    Originally posted by peppi View Post
    Chin-ups are the safest. Be VERY careful with deadlifts. In martial arts punching and pulling actions plus weapon training develops the back as well.

    Suggest go real slow with the deadlift and use a trainer to take you through your first session with them. Keep back straight, and when you start the lift, sink back on your heels a bit as you slowly lift the 225 lb barbell off the floor.

    Ok U are strong; 315 lbs.

    I did strain my lower back doing this once, I went too quick. It almost feels like bone problems and it takes 2 weeks to heal up, but you can still work the back, just work around it. Took me a month to fully recover but I am long over fifty y.o.

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  • Middleweight
    replied
    Originally posted by KenshiRyan View Post
    purely for building muscles, dont have any problems with my back haha.
    Chinups... do them with a 25 lb dumbell held between the legs, if you are strong enough to get 15 or more. One ex I like donig is lying laterally across a bench, and I take a 50 lb dumbell and do pull overs. Breathing IN when lowering the thing almost to the floor and my back is arched real good. I hold my breath at the full extent for maye 3-4 seconds. breath out on the lift

    Best one though is the one that can wreck you if you use bad technique.

    The Deadlift. It is real demanding hard work. If you do 4-5 sets of 5 reps heavy (close grip), then lighten the load and do maybe 2 x 10 with legs almost straight (wide grip), and back straight...with a shrug of the shoulders etc... you will grow a strong back. Good finisher is also bent over rows, after the deads. 2 x 8 reps is plenty enough. Rest the next day. Do the deads 2 x a week and the rest 3 x a week(same day)

    I suggest do Squats and then chest on same day. Deads after leg work, then chest. If you are working the whole body, best to do just one good slow set of biceps curls, and shoulder presses. U be tired enough already

    Good luck. If the deads are too much, you can do backraises on that weird looking rack that you hook your heels under the t bar and thighs across the pads. Hold an arch for a couple of seconds at the top of each rep. Lower back will be very sore if you never done this one. Go slow, and after 4-5 sessions, your back will handle this ex okay. 2 sets of 10 works good enough. Get stronger, do it with a 25 lb plate in your hands
    Last edited by Middleweight; 01-07-2009, 09:22 AM. Reason: content

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  • Maxx
    replied
    Balance is definitely important as it prevents injury from occurring. Most martial artists simply from our fighting postures develop what is called in internal rotation... that is, our shoulders roll forward, our neck tends to lean forward and we tend to have a greater kyphotic curve to our thoracic spine. Training the back, specifically the rhomboids can help to correct this imbalance.

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  • peppi
    replied
    Chin-ups are the safest. Be VERY careful with deadlifts. In martial arts punching and pulling actions plus weapon training develops the back as well.

    Leave a comment:


  • tophalf69
    replied
    Originally posted by Hardball View Post
    The chest is the agonist muscle and the back is the antagonist thus those exercises help both the back and the chest.
    The agonist and antagonist depends on the muscle being trained. If you are training back then the chest becomes the antagonist to the back and if you train chest the back becomes the antagonist to the chest. The antagonist simply helps the joints/tendons/bones achieve a balance of forces. For example if you did bi-cep curls without the tri-cep acting as it's antaganist the elbow joint would blow out, therefore the antagonist is required.

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  • tophalf69
    replied
    Originally posted by KenshiRyan View Post
    Hi just wondering if anyone knows any good exercises for back muscles with or without using weights?

    Thanks.
    Deadlifts
    Partial deadlifts out of a rack
    Chins
    Pulldowns (reverse grip and overhand grip, wide medium and close grips)
    Bent over ez bar rows with a reverse grip pulled into your hips while bending at a 45 degree angle
    Bent over dumbbell row
    Hyper-extensions
    Seated pulley rows (both narrow and wide grip)
    Seated machine rows (Hammer strength are tip top)
    T-bar rows

    Obvioulsy don't do all of these, you will be in serious pain for a week at least and way overtrained if you do!!!

    My faves are, Deadlifts, chins, bent ez row, pulldowns and seated pulley.

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  • Emma13
    replied
    Re: Weight exercises for back muscles

    Body weight exercises are very good, if you have the strength to do them. With added weights is good, when you are ready for the increase.





    --------------------------------
    Tribulus Terrestris, Health Directory

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  • Greg M.
    replied
    Check out Underground Training Exercises for tons of great exercises

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  • KenshiRyan
    replied
    thanks guys, either way i already do what Hardball has recomended Im just guna slap what everyone else has recomended onto my routine n see what helps me, Im more for building muscle to help with my martial arts training etc its just iv left the back and I dont want to be unbalanced in terms of muscle on my body if you get what I mean as it just feels werd.

    anyways Thanks very much guys for the response i learnt alot more than expected haha.

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  • Ghost
    replied
    Originally posted by Hardball View Post
    You're right, I gave you positive rep for this one.
    thanks mate, was just wanting to make it clear thats all.

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  • Hardball
    replied
    Originally posted by Ghost View Post
    what does tone mean?

    you either build muscle or you dont, you cant tone it as such.

    even so hed not get anywhere with chest exercises for his back, bench press has nothing to do with the back other some slight flexion caused by the movement of the chest. it doesnt work antagonistically in the bench press motion. the downward movement in the bench press is the relaxation of the chest not the contraction of the back.
    You're right, I gave you positive rep for this one.

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  • Filero
    replied
    I'm not sure, but it seems like the original poster's goals are purely looks-based, he wants to make his back bigger, and he seems to be implying that his chest is already developed, so there's an imbalance, which often leads to injuries besides looking funny. There's no performance implications, just pure bodybuilding...

    Many bodybuilding sites will have lots of exercises. If you're really so far behind, start off with the big ones and keep away with the more isolated exercises that build little back parts here and there. Among the things you should focus on right now: at least one or two vertical pulling movements (I like weighted pullups and chinups for this), and at least one horizontal pulling movement (I like bent-over rows for this). To whatever extent you can, stay away from machines, which isolate more and more -- right now, you want to hit every muscle in your back that you can, and so stick with freeweights and bodyweight movements which will force you to use all the little stabilizers that machines remove from the equation. Once you build a base you're happy with, then you can fine-tune with more isolated movements.

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