When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: best cable crossover workout routine

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. You're Doing the Cable Crossover All Wrong. Do This Instead.

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/youre-doing-cable...

    A fitness expert explains how to do the cable crossover exercise, including better variations, sets and reps, and how to incorporate it into your workouts.

  3. List of weight training exercises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_weight_training...

    Major variants: reverse ~ (curling the pelvis towards the shoulders), twisting ~ or side ~ (lifting one shoulder at a time; emphasis is on the obliques), cable ~ (pulling down on a cable machine while kneeling), sit-up ~ (have [chest] touch your knees), vertical crunch (propping up to dangle legs and pulling knees to the [ chest] or keeping ...

  4. Cable machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_machine

    The upright row is one exercise that can be performed on the cable machine. A cable machine is an item of equipment used in weight training or functional training.It consists of a rectangular, vertically oriented steel frame about 3 metres wide and 2 metres high, with a weight stack attached via a cable and pulley system to one or more handles. [1]

  5. The 2025 Men’s Health Fitness Awards: The Best New ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/2025-men-health-fitness-awards...

    Most home gyms have to rely on resistance bands to simulate gym cable crossover machines. The Voltra 1 seeks to change that, offering a bevy of resistance profiles and up to 200 pounds of ...

  6. Row (weight-lifting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Row_(weight-lifting)

    In strength training, rowing (or a row, usually preceded by a qualifying adjective — for instance a cable seated row, barbell upright row, dumbbell bent-over row, T-bar rows, et cetera) is an exercise where the purpose is to strengthen the muscles that draw the rower's arms toward the body (latissimus dorsi) as well as those that retract the scapulae (trapezius and rhomboids) and those that ...

  7. Eccentric training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eccentric_training

    This movement has also been described as negative training. This "negative" movement is necessary to reverse the muscle from its initial trajectory. [1]When the load exceeds the force that can be developed by the muscle at a constant length, as in an eccentric muscle action, the exercise is referred to as involving negative work, because the muscle is absorbing energy.