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Registered User
Looking for alternative exercises to use at home rather than gym (Please see)
Hi All,
Im going to try and follow the Zero to Hero in one year fitness program
(Cant Post Link)
The problem is I dont have time to go the gym 4x a week due to my job and looking after a child, i'm starting from the 4-6 months workout (due to previous fitness experience from martial arts). I have a dumbell and barbell weights set at home, aswell as a pull up bar and bench. Most of the exercises i can do at home but some I can't and im not sure what I could do as an alternative. I don't think it'd be advisable to drop the exercise completely.
If anyone could give me an alternative to the exercises in bold i'd really appreciate it.
Day 1: Shoulders
Seated Military Press
3 sets of 6-8 reps
Front Dumbbell Raise
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Side Lateral Raise
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Rear Lateral Raise
3 sets of 10-12 reps
Day 2: Back/Biceps/Abs
Pull Ups
3 sets of 6-8 reps
Bent Over Barbell Row
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Close Grip Pulldowns
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Seated Row
3 sets of 10-12 reps
Dumbbell Shrug
3 sets of 15-20 reps
Alternate Dumbbell Curl
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Hammer Curl
3 sets of 12-15 reps
Hanging Leg Raise
5 sets of 20 reps
Day 3: Off
Day 4: Legs
Squats
3 sets of 6-8 reps
Leg Press
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Leg Extensions
3 sets of 12-15 reps
Stiff Leg Deadlift
3 sets of 12-15 reps
Lying Leg Curl
3 sets of 12-15 reps
Standing Calf Raise
5 sets of 15-20 reps
Day 5: Chest/Triceps/Abs
Incline Bench Press
3 sets of 6-8 reps
Flat Dumbbell Flyes
3 sets of 8-10 reps
Decline Bench Press
3 sets of 10-12 reps
Dips
3 sets of 10-12 reps
Rope Pushdowns
3 sets of 12-15 reps
Weighted Crunches
5 sets of 20 reps
Days 6 and 7: Off
Many Thanks,
Froobage
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Prepare Perform Prevail
Pulldowns - Chin Ups
Seated Rows - Inverted Rows
Leg Press - Lunges
Dips - Floor Pressing/Skull Crushers
Pushdowns - Kickbacks
Some of these movements are redundant IMO anyways.
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=132349183&page=5
**2013 Training Log**
"225, 315, 405 whatever. Yeah these benchmark digits come to mean a lot to us, the few warriors in this arena. They are, however, just numbers. I’m guilty of that sh*t too, waiting for somebody to powder my nuts cuz I did 20 reps of whatever the **** on the bench. Big f*king deal. It is all relative." G Diesel
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Registered User
You can check scoobysworkshop.com for excellent advice.
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Vampire Supremacist
If you have dumbbells, barbells and a bench, you do not need anything else.
I'm not saying by any means that it's complete, but I only have the same equipment you listed and my workout consists of:
-shoulder press
-upright row
-shrug
-front lever pullup
-deadlift
-barbell curl
-skullcrusher/pullover
-chest fly (prefer this to bench)
I could easily add in benching, some kind of rows etc. as well. I have a pair of sawhorses and a dipping belt, so I can dip when I please too.
Protip: Divide a thread's number of replies by its number of views, then multiply by 100 to get a percentage. If less than 5%, odds of being something worth reading go way up. If >10%, it's almost guaranteed to be something retarded.
"When you guys fight over nonsense IDrinkbloodLOL wins." -MangoPort
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Phat
With a bench, rack, barbell and dumbbells, you're set. Most machines just simulate free weight exercises. Try to adjust your training so that the exercises you do have a specific muscle group/movement targeted. So for example for triceps, you want to do exercises so that you hit all three heads of the tricep (skull crushers for the long head, CGBP for the medial/lateral heads), and for chest, you want to do one fly movement and one or two pushing movements.
And while more volume is good because you're only training your muscle groups once a week, you might not be able to progressive overload, which is what is essentially needed when building muscle, as well as a beginner. Personally, after a few sets of heavy flat barbell bench press, it's impossible for me to lift as much as I would want to on the incline/decline and I end up stalling.
Keep it simple by not being so repetitive with some movements (so much pressing) and focusing on progressive overload while working the variety of functions of the muscle. If you get bored/stall/see a weak point, pick a different variation of the exercise (pull-up to chin-up, switch up the bench press, back squat to front squat, etc).
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Registered User
Here goes...
Close grip pull-downs: chin ups
seated row: T-bar row
leg press: front squats/lunges (don't bother with the leg curls/extensions, your squats and deadlifts are fine)
dips: close grip bench press/weighted push-ups (put weight in a back-pack)
rope pushdowns: skullcrushers
As with what other posters are saying, you don't have to include some of the isolation or machine-based exercises if you have the basic compound free-weight exercises going. Good routine though
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Registered User
Cheers for the replies! Some good advice thank you
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