Ok, tried hanging leg raises for the first time yesterday, and man they are a pain! When you relax the motion from the flex of bringing your legs up, do you end the motion by letting your feet touch the ground, before bringing your legs up again? I had a hard time keeping the momentum from causing my body to start swinging.
no do not let your feet touch the ground. keep em about 6 inches off, ya they are killer but are great. ive found that it gives you a more define cut on your lower abs.
I would focus more on training your core and not just your abs. This includes the erectors, obliques, abs, and transverse abs. Twisting motions are essentially along wiht direct lower back training.
Rodja my good sir,
What would you recommend as some of the best exercises for strengthening the core?
Standing cable crunches, ab wheel, DB side bends, full leg raises.
Thank you for the response! Definitely going to incorporate these in.
With the DB side bends what rep range should I shoot for? Strength is usually always my goal. This is a particular area where I know people don't want to add mass (not sure the muscle can get very large in the first place though??).
one of the best things I have done for my abs is to start getting an arch in my back when I do the motions, it forces you to elongate your abs and really hit them. Also, when I do any kind of a crunch motion I keep my chin to the ceiling instead of to my chest.
to to hijack but rodja, are you a sports physician?
I didn't know that (I think you said this in another thread before, but responding to it here). Thanks.Contrary to popular belief, DB side bends do not work the obliques. They actually work a smallish muscle along the lumbar called the quadratus lumborum, which is critical for lumbar support and integrity. I like to use the 8-12 rep range and it provides a bit of grip work as a bonus.
Beating the hell out of a tire with a sledge hammer always makes me feel good :hammer:. I'm not sure if it's a specific ab workout, but I know it helps with overall core strength.
ReedSkin said:For "the perfect abs". 5% gear, 15% training, 80% diet.
aaronreay said:How about 20% training 80% diet lol
I've been looking for a good tire I could use for front flips and beating with a sledge on craigslist for quite some time but I can never find anything. Anyone know where a good place to find one is?
tigerdb2 said:Kills thirds birds with one stone but in my training, I classify O/H Squats as a core exercise more so than a squat variation. I use it for core strength and shoulder stability in addition to the squat. The overload comes more on the side of core strength and shoulder stability than your leg strength.
And I'm not sure where I read it so forgive me for bringing just about nothing to this subject but I have seen one or two studies that showed through EMG that you actually can specifically target the inferior/ superior aspect of your rectus abdominis. It's not necessarily "isolating" upper or lower but it wasn't equal activation. I'll see if I can dig it up but forgive me if i'm lazy and fail
I wouldn't advice over emphasizing the arch, especially during crunches. This activates the hip flexors and removes emphasis from the abdominals. In fact, try crunching while keeping your glutes contract and pushing your lumbar spine into the floor. This will greatly decrease the range of motion, and they will be more difficult, but you will actually be using the abdominals.
And I further rodja's suggestion of training entire core.
Br