Consider me old school but I have avoided the smith machine up until this last week...and I have no idea why! I love this thing, but I have to ask- does anyone know how much weight it "takes off" the lift? I can lift considerably more, especially my inclined bench on the smith, then just normal inclined bp.
Typical. It's an ego thing. Sorry I come from a background of studying right and left brain tendencies.
Your ego side of the brain is concerned about numbers, instead of safety or efficiency. So you're asking about how much weight it "takes off" or that you can move and not about more important concerns. So what you can push up 300 lbs but say it was really 275? Why would you want to do this or train in a manner where you HAD to do this in order to track potential progress? Then one day you're going to do what, switch to a real exercise and realize you didn't really make that much of a gain because you weren't training in the proper way?
It might sound like I'm attacking but I'm not. It's just why I don't advise you to use it. Its like running 2 miles a day on the treadmill then switching to real running. It's just not the same and you're not doing the same work, so why do it. Sure you can use the smith for anything you like, but it's not as safe or optimal as would be other wise so why do it? I don't understand the concept realy of using machines unless you're rehabbing and then minimal.
And yes furthermore, name one set of muscles that can move a joint along a linear 2 dimensional path. Every movement is an arc along multiple axes.
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