Showing posts with label adjustable dumbbells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adjustable dumbbells. Show all posts

Friday, 19 July 2013

Building Calf Muscles With Adjustable Dumbbells


Calves

Standing calf raises: Rise up on the balls of your feet as high as possible, then lower back down. For greater range of motion, place a block under the balls of your feet. This lowers your heels when you drop back down, stretching your Achilles tendon and putting tension on the gastrocnemius and sole-us muscles. A holding weighted dumbbells will make this exercise more difficult... and more effective.

Building Calf Muscles With Adjustable Dumbbells
Seated calf raises: The procedure is the same as for standing calf raises, but you're seated. You can sit the dumbbells on your legs as you rise up on the balls of your feet. Seated calf raises aren't effective in strengthening the gastrocnemius, which is best worked while standing. But they do wonders for the soleus muscle.

Here is a list of the Top Adjustable Dumbbells

Donkey calf raises: You don't need weights to do this one. Bend over, with the balls of your feet balanced on the edge of a large, solid block, and have your training partner sit on your back right above your pelvis, for resistance. It's cumbersome, but effective.

Types of Adjustable Dumbbells

Triceps
The scle, the triceps, which extends the arm when it contracts.

The tricep kickback is easiest to do with the support of a bench. The tricep overhead extension can be done with one arm, or two. You can of course use more weight if you're using both hands.

You can also work the triceps without dumbbells, with tricep dips. These can be done by supporting your hands on a bench.

Shoulders
The deltoid is the large muscle forming the shoulder cap, and serves to raise the arm from the side; it runs from the shoulder-blade to the middle of the humerus.

The Alternate Front Raise blasts the anterior (front) deltoids. The Dumbbell Lateral Raise targets the medial (side) deltoids. Bent-over Lateral Raises intensely works the posterior (back) deltoids.

Upper Back
The chief muscles engaged in lowering the arm again are the latissimus dorsi (lats), which runs forwards and upwards from the back and side of the chest wall to be attached to the front of the neck of the humerus; the coraco-brachialis, attached to the middle of the front of the humerus; and the pectoralis major, which forms the front fold of the armpit.

The latissimus dorsi is the widest and most powerful muscle of the back. Properly trained its what gives bodybuilders the sought after V taper.

The lats can be worked out with a one arm dumbell row and also a bent over row.

The All Dumbbell Workout

The Benefits of Dumbbells

It's a shame that many people have overlooked the versatile dumbbell in their search for the perfect machine.
The truth is that some Best Adjustable Dumbbells occupy little space, and they can be used to work every body part efficiently and completely.

Dumbbells require balance and coordination, which is why, in part, dumbbells can be more effective than machines and or even barbells.

Balance is a big deal in weight training, and for good reason. When you lift two dumbbells overhead in alternate fashion, you have to use your muscular coordination to balance the weights. This balancing act requires a high degree of muscle stabilization, co-contraction and proprioception — a sense of where your body is in space.

The first time you try to bench press with two dumbbells, it feels as if the weights are all over the place. You know you're strong enough to lift the weights, but you seem to fight with the resistance and struggle to channel your power correctly. This is the body's way of learning to conquer balance and improve its coordination. The guided form of resistance you encounter with a machine won't test your muscular strength in this important way.

Balance and coordination skills are a team effort — while one or more muscles actively contract to move one of your limbs through a range of motion, other helping muscles stabilize a joint or assist at various points throughout the motion. This phenomenon is called synergy, the cooperative action of two or more muscles.

While those muscles work in synergy, certain joint and muscle receptors constantly monitor small deviations in direction and speed. This monitoring helps to direct the development of a muscle in conjunction with the mechanisms of balance and skill coordination. All of that interplay is crucial to building muscle size and strength.

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