starting strength gym
Page 1 of 21 12311 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 207

Thread: Hex Bar

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    32

    Default Hex Bar

    • starting strength seminar jume 2024
    • starting strength seminar august 2024
    • starting strength seminar october 2024
    Hi Mark

    The SS website featured an excellent article by you about deadlift mechanics. (5/24/17)

    I would really appreciate a similar article about the deadlift vs hex (or trap) bar deadlift.

    From my limited experience and limited intelligence, it would seem that the hex bar is superior to the straight bar in several areas.

    It doesn't scrape your shins, there's not an issue with having to use an alternate grip, a person can typically deadlift more weight with the hex bar than the straight bar, and finally - the bar can follow a straighter, more vertical path, since the lifters body isn't in the way.

    In the SS book, you do suggest alternate methods of performing various lifts, for people with mobility issues. And you also suggest different bars for those same issues.

    If the hex bar is superior to the straight bar, it deserves to be considered by SS coaches. And if it's not - those of us that subscribe to SS methods ought to know why - and you can probably articulate those reasons better than anyone.

    Thank you

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,685

    Default

    The Hex (trap) bar is not superior to the barbell in any way.

    1. Sorry about your shins.

    2. The alternate grip problem is addressed with the use of the hook grip, or straps for non-competitors at work-set weights.

    3. That a person can "deadlift" more using this device is both undemonstrated and irrelevant. There are ways of pulling more weight than a correct deadlift permits, i.e. rack pulls, but that doesn't make them superior to the deadlift.

    4. If you think the lifter's body is "in the way" during a deadlift, you don't know how to deadlift. The instructions are here: Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training | The Aasgaard Company

    5. If anything, the trap-bar "deadlift" more closely resembles squat mechanics than pulling mechanics, with a more vertical back angle and the grip-strength limitation imposed on it. We're already squatting, right?

    5. What other bars have I suggested the use of for primary exercises anywhere in print?

    6. But the primary problem is this: what is the lockout position of a trap-bar "deadlift" vs. the lockout position of a deadlift? Think about this carefully.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Posts
    279

    Default

    This speaks to a larger issue about how the hex bar is perceived as a barbell deadlift equivalent because the lifter is picking weight off the ground from a dead stop.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2015
    Location
    Indianapolis, IN
    Posts
    2,270

    Default

    There's your article Brit67. That basically encompasses the majority the problems with the hex bar. The only one I think is missing is "Even if you believe they're just as good as each other (which they are not), why incorporate complexity and cost into something that doesn't need to be more complex or more costly?"

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    32

    Default

    1. My shins appreciate your concern

    2. Agreed

    3. There's a website (strengthlevel.com) where lifters can post their lifts. There are over 2 million lifts reported for the deadlift, and 15,000 for the hex bar deadlift. At every bodyweight, in both male and female categories, the hex bar lifts are heavier than the standard deadlift. It's true, many people could be doing the deadlift incorrectly, but I doubt that people have performed over 2 million of them incorrectly.

    4. No argument with you

    5. A trap bar deadlift can be performed in a variety of ways, either keeping the hips higher, like a deadlift, or lowering the hips and using more quads.

    6. Page 230 of PP (3rd edition)... "The Football Bar/ aka The Swiss Bar has a variety of grips built into the shaft that allow a wide variety of hand positions. The Swiss Bar is an extremely valuable piece of equipment for any facility that trains older populations."

    7. Couldn't the lock out position be coached? The bottom of the squat is something that can be coached - it's not a function of the bar.


    I'm 50 years young, so your praise of the Swiss Bar is extremely pertinent, and I'm not sure why a similar view can't be adopted for the Hex Bar. I get that there are differences between the deadlift and the hex bar deadlift. I'm not sure that those differences warrant it being ignored or maligned. Wouldn't it make sense to explain how to use it correctly - as a potential alternative to the straight bar deadlift, especially for older lifters?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,685

    Default

    Since the publication of that version, I have had more experience with the football bar, and it is a dangerous and silly device, completely unstable in the lockout position, just like the trap bar. I have posted about this before. And you have completely missed the point about the lockout position at the top of the pull: in a deadlift, where is the bar at lockout? Against your thighs, locked in a stable position by your upper body mass cantilevered behind the mass of the bar. The trap bar is floating around at the ends of your arms, unstable, just waiting to fuck up your lumbar spine, especially for older lifters. And the fact that you doubt that 2 million deadlifts cannot have been performed incorrectly is testament to your inexperience -- 2 million deadlifts will be performed incorrectly within the next hour. These facts coupled with the unnecessary expense of the equipment make the trap bar deadlift not only completely unnecessary, but undesirable for anybody except equipment salesmen.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Kingwood TX
    Posts
    8,914

    Default

    The issue with Bench Presses is that many older lifts cannot perform them at all without significant problems with their shoulders that outweigh the benefit of trying to force the issue. Sometimes a narrower neutral grip can allow for a bench press to be performed and the Swiss Bar is easier to progress than DB's.

    The Deadlift can be taught to just about anyone and for some older lifters that struggle mightily with getting their back into extension a slight elevation of the barbell using mats, wood blocks, or a low pin setting in the rack can usually fix the issue.

    As Rip said, there are benefits to Barbell Deadlifts that you cannot replicate with variations of the movement. The Hex Bar is like a partial squat and the fact you can load it heavier doesn't necessarily make it better. Most of us can also Leg Press more than we can squat but it doesn't make it a better lift.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Posts
    279

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Brit67 View Post
    5. A trap bar deadlift can be performed in a variety of ways, either keeping the hips higher, like a deadlift, or lowering the hips and using more quads.
    If the hips can be held higher like a barbell deadlift, why not do a barbell deadlift? How many people who use the hex bar actually set up like they would on a barbell deadlift? I did a quick Google image of "hex bar deadlift", and of the first few hundreds of photos, I only saw one where someone set up looking like they were setting up with a barbell. Interestingly enough, the photo is linked to a T-Nation article about the merits of The Trap Bar Deadlift, but the article describes a set-up where you drop your hips.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    32

    Default

    Thank you for your feedback. As they say "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em." Being fairly new to the forum, I wasn't aware you'd changed your view of the Swiss Bar. Any suggestions on good protection for my shins ?

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,685

    Default

    starting strength coach development program
    Have you actually read the book? Pull the deadlift correctly, and you won't need any shin protection.

Page 1 of 21 12311 ... LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •