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Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape

Army bases, city parks, church gyms, and state prisons are full of guys with wide shoulders, thick backs, and big chests and arms

Army bases, city parks, church gyms, and state prisons are full of guys with wide shoulders, thick backs, and big chests and arms

Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape

by Laurentiu Gheorghisan
Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape
Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape
Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape

What is it about?

Army bases, city parks, church gyms, and state prisons are full of guys with wide shoulders, thick backs, and big chests and arms. And if you asked them what they do to achieve this look, you’d always hear the same answer: pullups and pushups. These simple, timeless exercises work the entire upper body and can be performed virtually anywhere.

Army Ranger Pull up Bar Workout - Get into fighting shape

App Details

Version
1.2
Rating
NA
Size
12Mb
Genre
Health & Fitness Medical
Last updated
November 3, 2015
Release date
July 23, 2015

App Store Description

Army bases, city parks, church gyms, and state prisons are full of guys with wide shoulders, thick backs, and big chests and arms. And if you asked them what they do to achieve this look, you’d always hear the same answer: pullups and pushups. These simple, timeless exercises work the entire upper body and can be performed virtually anywhere.

We’ll show you how to take full advantage of these moves, and some of their most effective variations, to build your back, arms, chest, and shoulders—no weights, or jail sentence, required.

How It Works
When you do a pullup, you engage your lats, mid-back, rear delts, biceps, forearms, and core. Pushups train your chest, shoulders, triceps, and core. So between these two movements, you’ve got the whole upper body covered.

Another benefit of body-weight training is that it’s low-impact. As a result you can train more frequently than if you were using heavy weights, and the more often you work out, the greater your potential to build muscle.

The only caveat to high-frequency training is the risk of overuse injuries, but you can avoid those by changing up your exercises so you don’t recruit the same muscles the same way every time. That’s why each of the workouts on these pages pairs up a different variation of the pullup and pushup.

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