My suggestion and it's a suggestion that I make because many coach types have made it to me is that for max hangs you want max effort per hang so you can cause maximum overload and therefore you should rest for as long as you need to ensure every hang is of maximum quality. Personally I don't have a set rest time but like, I probably rest for at least 5 mins per set. And that's true of all the strength training I do, just rest as long as I need.
Without knowing anything about this really, from chatting with the person who did my little training plan you don’t need to go to failure for strength gains.So I did my max hang test but then did 2-3 sessions a week between 80% and 90% of the “total weight” - I.e. added weights + body weight at the time.It allowed me to keep good form for all six 10s hangs, but still had to try hard and got notable strength gains from it over an 8 week period. I really liked this as it didn’t feel like I was pushing close to injury at all.
Dave Mac shared a study about this on his Insta[...]
It is also good to note that with good form doing a 100% load max hang is very safe.
Hey Steve, is this 2 armed?
Excuse the daft question. When people talk about X% effort, are you all referring to the same thing? Do you mean a perceived percentage of the effort applied in a hang to failure(qualitative)? Or are you measuring 100%, i.e. time at which you fail for a given load, and then hanging for X% of that time (quantitative)?
Quote from: Bonjoy on June 06, 2022, 08:40:17 amExcuse the daft question. When people talk about X% effort, are you all referring to the same thing? Do you mean a perceived percentage of the effort applied in a hang to failure(qualitative)? Or are you measuring 100%, i.e. time at which you fail for a given load, and then hanging for X% of that time (quantitative)?I think it’s more a percentage of how much you can hang. So say you’re max hang (100%) is +40kg - if you’re hanging 90% you would hang 36kg instead. That’s usually what I’m told to do when doing 90% effort.
Quote from: Carliios on June 06, 2022, 08:51:44 amQuote from: Bonjoy on June 06, 2022, 08:40:17 amExcuse the daft question. When people talk about X% effort, are you all referring to the same thing? Do you mean a perceived percentage of the effort applied in a hang to failure(qualitative)? Or are you measuring 100%, i.e. time at which you fail for a given load, and then hanging for X% of that time (quantitative)?I think it’s more a percentage of how much you can hang. So say you’re max hang (100%) is +40kg - if you’re hanging 90% you would hang 36kg instead. That’s usually what I’m told to do when doing 90% effort.Disagree with this though, the percentage should be of the total weight, so in your example if you weighed 70kg the total is 110kg, and 90% is 99kg, or +29kg
Doing at least 2 max hang sessions per week at the moment in the hope of maintaining or maybe even gaining a bit of grip streng. Can't remember exactly why but I'm doing 5 or 6 sets of 10 sec hangs with 3 mins between sets (well 2min50secs actually). First set feels relatively steady but typically failing around the 6/7sec mark on later sets. Feels like if I rested longer between sets I could probably knock out the full 5 or 6 x 10 secs... So, to maximise benefit, what would general wisdom be?a) don't change anything, near enoughb) stick to 3 mins between sets but reduce weight a bit so completing more/all sets to full 10sc) stick with current added weight but increase rest time between sets to help complete more/all sets to full 10s