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Free
Weights vs. Exercise Machines
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by: Aaron
M. Potts
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Anyone
who has ever been in a gym before is familiar with
the gleaming banks of shiny exercise machines.
Coming in all shapes and sizes, they are usually
cause for the newcomer to the gym to pause and
ask, "What IS all of that stuff?"
Well, according to the price that the gym paid for
any one piece of that equipment, I certainly hope
that it not only stimulates your muscles, but also
cooks your breakfast, washes your car, and brings
the kids home from soccer practice! Now the
question becomes whether or not those machines
were worth the price, or if you'd be better off
doing a home aerobics video with a can of soup in
each hand….
Personally, I would advise you to get the
low-sodium version of the soup, serve it up
alongside a tomato sandwich, and then go buy
yourself some free weights. Yes, that is just my
opinion, but it does come with some scientific
reasoning behind it.
Natural movement vs. Controlled movement
One of the things that you need to remember is
that when you are exercising, you are training for
LIFE. You may spend an hour a day at the gym, but
that still leaves 23 other hours for your muscles
to function without the aid of that fancy
equipment.
Whenever you do any given exercise, the movement
of your body during that exercise is called the
Range of Motion. The greater and more difficult
the Range of Motion, the more effective the
exercise is, because your body has to work harder
to perform that movement.
Let's take a classic dumbbell bicep curl for our
case study. If you aren't familiar with the
movement, it is basically performed by standing up
straight with your palms facing forward, and a
pair of dumbbells held down at your sides. You
concentrically contract your biceps (also known as
flexing your elbow) to bring the dumbbells up to
approximately shoulder level, and then repeat the
movement for a prescribed number of repetitions.
Let's take that same muscle movement and do it
using a bicep curl machine. You sit down, brace
your upper arms on a pad, grasp 2 handles that are
in front of you, and do that same fancy elbow
flexing movement to move the handles in an upward
motion. Pretty easy stuff so far, right?
Now let's examine the muscles that are used in
this motion. Wait - I thought we were
concentrically contracting the biceps? That is
correct, and if you are using the bicep curl
machine, that is pretty much ALL you are doing.
For one, you are sitting down. You know, like you
did all day at work, and then in your car on the
way to the gym. Then, your upper arms are braced
on a nice soft pad to keep your upper body stable
while you pull the handles upwards. The machine
has effectively limited the muscles used in this
exercise to the biceps, as well as the muscles in
your forearms and fingers as you grip the handles.
Let us now sidestep over to the weight room where
the dumbbells are kept, and once again get in the
start position for a standing bicep curl with the
dumbbells. Notice the term "standing".
You know, like you DIDN'T do all day at work, and
hopefully also did not do in your car on the way
to the gym. So before we even start the exercise,
we are using more muscles than we did on the
machine - namely the leg muscles.
Now let's pick up a 10 lb dumbbell in each hand.
We've just added 20 lbs to our body weight. What
is keeping us from losing our center of balance
and falling clean over? The abdominal muscles and
the muscles of the lower back and spine. Now we
are using our legs, our abs, and our back. Flex
those elbows and start to raise the dumbbells. Now
our center of gravity has become a fluid state,
and our legs, back, and abs all have to constantly
compensate to maintain posture. Oh, and the biceps
are also in on the action by this point, as are
the forearms, the fingers, and the shoulder
girdle.
We now have the dumbbells all the way up and it's
time to start lowering them again, via an
eccentric contraction of the biceps (also know as
extending the elbow). What muscle group controls
the extension of the elbow? The triceps on the
back of the arm.
Did you lose track yet? It's okay if you did
because you have illustrated the point:
Machine Bicep Curl: Uses the biceps, forearms, and
fingers
Cost: Thousands of dollars
Standing Dumbbell Bicep Curl: Uses the biceps,
forearms, fingers, legs, abs, back, triceps, and
shoulders.
Cost: $40 for a good set of dumbbells that can be
used for dozens of other exercises
In a nutshell, free weight exercises simply USE
MORE MUSCLES than machines do, which make them
more effective. Does that mean that the machines
are a complete waste? Absolutely not! In some
circumstances it is BETTER to stabilize the
muscles being used in any given movement. However,
those circumstances are the exception, rather than
the rule.
So what do you do? Change up your routine, and
incorporate free weights as well as machine
exercises. However, keep the machine work to a
minimum - say 20% of your total time spent working
with weights. Spend the other 80% developing your
stabilizer muscles, your sense of balance and
coordination, and if nothing else - just standing
up!
After all, you can go home and sit down on the
couch to enjoy your post-workout snack. The bicep
machine already brought the kids home from soccer
practice, remember?
About the author:
Aaron Potts is the owner and creator of Fitness
Destinations, a content-filled health and fitness
website for consumers as well as professionals in
the fitness industry. Aaron's experience in the
health and fitness industry includes one on one
personal training in many different environments,
maintenance of several health-related websites,
and authoring of many fitness-related products for
consumers and fitness professionals. http://www.fitnessdestinations.com
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