55 is too light. I doubt there’s anything it can do to contribute to a stronger pull. The number of reps required to make in challenging would force me into endurance territory, not strength.
However, there may be a load that is sufficient to make the lats stronger but not stressful enough to interfere with the deadlift two days later. Assistance exercises by nature are lighter than the parent exercise (except, say, partial range of motion variants.)
Where's the gif of the Little Leaguer taking a dozen ground balls before he finally fields one correctly?
I guess dumbbell rows are a poor choice for light day pulling and won't assist the deadlift.
I'm just trying to finagle something that will fit for light day pulling and can be performed in an apartment that's not outfitted for barbell training. The snatch, power clean and barbell rows won't fit (noise constraints). That's my line of thinking - not that DB rows are an underrated deadlift assistance exercise - just that they fit the logistical constraints of my current schedule and can be progressively loaded just like a barbell row.
If you like doing them, go ahead. But let's not attribute to them benefits they do not produce.
Rip’s last post wraps this up, I’d say. For what it’s worth, I thought the original post was just the OP trolling Rip. Nope, as it turns out. Would have been a good one.
Smyth, I must have over 1k posts here, many of which are technique help I gave in 2015 when I was working as a personal trainer (non SSC) - no trolling here.
Looking back at that first post, I was really aiming to talk about technique considerations for this exercise. I acknowledged that the non-ideal exercise selection was due to scheduling constraints.
Ed, thanks for the tip. The landlord forbids these - fear of doorframe damage. I get my chins in when I’m at the real gym, however.
Okay these are pretty funny but I didn't find any of them where people were using the pullup bars to actually do pullups! I don't have such apparatus so maybe I'm just naive. But when I do pullups, I grab the bar with both hands (Even if you are 5ft even, I think you can reach the top of a door frame) and then lower myself until I'm in a dead hang. Bend my knees the rest of the way, do the set, and put my feet down. If the bar fell, I would be able to land on my feet although it would then hit me in the head.
However, if you aren't able to follow the installation instructions (or the landlord prohibits it), you can get a pullup bar / dip station for $100 new. $50 used. Less if you are good at negotiating.
Even if DB rows were a great exercise, they suck to do with loadable dumbbells because the diameter of the plates is too large. And real dumbbells cost a fortune. Plus your landlord will be pissed if you drop them by accident.
I used to work with recreational rock climbers. They didn't need pullup bars. They could actually do pullups with their fingertips on the door trim. I never did master that skill