Originally posted by: Koing
Most gyms would go f0cking mental at you sliding the weight down one side and then the other. If you have 100kg+ at one point you the bar will be savagely unbalanced...
Best thing is to ask someone to spot or cut 1-2reps before you are going to really struggle. NOT IDEAL at all BUT A LOT SAFER then pushing hard and then failing to nail it. Best case situation is you manage to get the bar on to your chest and you roll it down your body until you can sit up with it. Worse case the bar crumples your neck and you die becuase you were too proud to ask for help...
Koing
Originally posted by: Eric62
First choice: Bench in a power cage with safety bars as previously described. I use this method 2/3rds of the time as I only have a training partner one day a week.
Second choice: Bench without collars as previously mentioned.
Third choice: Ask somebody for a safety spot. They don't hand the bar off or even stand near me, but they watch to see that I'm OK.
If the cage and my training partner aren't available I'll combine the 2nd and 3rd choices for my heaviest sets.
I just googled "bench press deaths" and didn't come up with anything useful, but it's easy for me to imagine being suffocated by a 500 lb (or even 315 lbs after total failure) barbell stuck on your chest...
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: Eric62
First choice: Bench in a power cage with safety bars as previously described. I use this method 2/3rds of the time as I only have a training partner one day a week.
Second choice: Bench without collars as previously mentioned.
Third choice: Ask somebody for a safety spot. They don't hand the bar off or even stand near me, but they watch to see that I'm OK.
If the cage and my training partner aren't available I'll combine the 2nd and 3rd choices for my heaviest sets.
I just googled "bench press deaths" and didn't come up with anything useful, but it's easy for me to imagine being suffocated by a 500 lb (or even 315 lbs after total failure) barbell stuck on your chest...
I've read of a few where the bar ultimately ended up on someone's neck.
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: Eric62
First choice: Bench in a power cage with safety bars as previously described. I use this method 2/3rds of the time as I only have a training partner one day a week.
Second choice: Bench without collars as previously mentioned.
Third choice: Ask somebody for a safety spot. They don't hand the bar off or even stand near me, but they watch to see that I'm OK.
If the cage and my training partner aren't available I'll combine the 2nd and 3rd choices for my heaviest sets.
I just googled "bench press deaths" and didn't come up with anything useful, but it's easy for me to imagine being suffocated by a 500 lb (or even 315 lbs after total failure) barbell stuck on your chest...
I've read of a few where the bar ultimately ended up on someone's neck.
Who needs blood flow to their brain anyhow? Oh, plus a crushed trachea. That all sounds very lovely, lol. What were the outcomes to those stories? Sounds pretty bad.
Originally posted by: Deeko
I just do it. I've been lifting alone for the past 4-5 years, I'm well aware of where my limits are.
Originally posted by: classy
Originally posted by: Deeko
I just do it. I've been lifting alone for the past 4-5 years, I'm well aware of where my limits are.
5 years for me as well.
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: classy
Originally posted by: Deeko
I just do it. I've been lifting alone for the past 4-5 years, I'm well aware of where my limits are.
5 years for me as well.
++ e-peen.
Originally posted by: Deeko
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: classy
Originally posted by: Deeko
I just do it. I've been lifting alone for the past 4-5 years, I'm well aware of where my limits are.
5 years for me as well.
++ e-peen.
:roll: