We've got one of these https://reviber.co.uk/reviber-zen-physio-deep-tissue-massager/I really like it, the long handle means I can get decent pressure on back and shoulders.Available for less than the above at popular online retailers.
Quote from: SA Chris on November 18, 2020, 03:48:27 pmWe've got one of these https://reviber.co.uk/reviber-zen-physio-deep-tissue-massager/I really like it, the long handle means I can get decent pressure on back and shoulders.Available for less than the above at popular online retailers.Ah, now I've got one of those. Where you're trying to massage seems most important. Makes very little impression on big muscles, better off using a lacrosse ball.
I have the theragun pro which is around £450 so not cheap. Its great on the forearms after getting pumped at crag all day.Also great after a day out on the bike for leg recovery.There are cheaper versions but not as powerful. You get what you pay for i guess.
Quote from: Adam Lincoln on November 18, 2020, 02:56:52 pmI have the theragun pro which is around £450 so not cheap. Its great on the forearms after getting pumped at crag all day.Also great after a day out on the bike for leg recovery.There are cheaper versions but not as powerful. You get what you pay for i guess.(b) the players are absolute units,
Quote from: moose on November 18, 2020, 05:24:19 pmQuote from: Adam Lincoln on November 18, 2020, 02:56:52 pmI have the theragun pro which is around £450 so not cheap. Its great on the forearms after getting pumped at crag all day.Also great after a day out on the bike for leg recovery.There are cheaper versions but not as powerful. You get what you pay for i guess.(b) the players are absolute units, You've seen me at Kilnsey
Quote from: Adam Lincoln on November 18, 2020, 05:39:44 pmQuote from: moose on November 18, 2020, 05:24:19 pmQuote from: Adam Lincoln on November 18, 2020, 02:56:52 pmI have the theragun pro which is around £450 so not cheap. Its great on the forearms after getting pumped at crag all day.Also great after a day out on the bike for leg recovery.There are cheaper versions but not as powerful. You get what you pay for i guess.(b) the players are absolute units, You've seen me at Kilnsey Of course, I took a photo of us together to mark the occasion:
Makes very little impression on big muscles, better off using a lacrosse ball. Ok on smaller muscles, elbows, forearms, etc but around the shoulder it still feels like a ball gets in deeper, certainly pain levels seem closer to a sports massage .
Am I the only one who keeps reading this thread title as "massive guns" and assuming it's about UKB's resident Italian stallion Lore?
Out of interest has anybody read any of the scientific literature about massage guns?
Massage has been studied fairly extensively, but usually in small-scale, low-quality research. You can find a single study that will support any proposition (massage helps, hinders, or makes no difference). Systematic reviews into sports performance conclude people generally feel better after massage but there are no consistent objective improvements. This applies to foam rolling and manual massage, massage guns don't seem to have much literature yet but I'd guess findings will be similar. There is some suggestion that massage may help slow the deterioration of muscle function during immobilisation, so could be something to do if you can't train.Interesting case report of someone who suffered quite severe muscle damage after their coach overdid things with the massage gun.
Quote from: duncan on November 21, 2020, 09:07:13 pmMassage has been studied fairly extensively, but usually in small-scale, low-quality research. You can find a single study that will support any proposition (massage helps, hinders, or makes no difference). Systematic reviews into sports performance conclude people generally feel better after massage but there are no consistent objective improvements. This applies to foam rolling and manual massage, massage guns don't seem to have much literature yet but I'd guess findings will be similar. There is some suggestion that massage may help slow the deterioration of muscle function during immobilisation, so could be something to do if you can't train.Interesting case report of someone who suffered quite severe muscle damage after their coach overdid things with the massage gun.There's something in the way scientists look at stuff like massage and physio etc. that suggests feeling good and pain free isn't an important and worthy goal.