Barbell Bench Press without spotter
nknis8556
Posts: 26 Member
Hi all--I've been looking over quite a few of the beginner/intermediate weight training programs posted in the link provided in the sticky thread up top, and many of them recommend progressive overload with 5 or so reps of traditional barbell bench presses. I've avoided the barbell in the past when I don't go to the gym with a regular workout partner, since it simply doesn't seem safe to push an appropriate amount of weight (viz., 5 reps with the last being close to failure) without a spotter. I've been using dumbbells instead. I have no problem asking Random Dude #352 to spot for a set, but doing so for several sets is just inconsiderate.
So, any advice is appreciated. Stick with dumbbells? Go lower, "safe" weight on the barbell, and, if so, increase reps?
Thanks!
So, any advice is appreciated. Stick with dumbbells? Go lower, "safe" weight on the barbell, and, if so, increase reps?
Thanks!
0
Replies
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Just ask someone. I do it all the time. Everyone at my gym does.1
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I never have a spotter and don't like asking (although I am more than happy to help when asked). If I'm not sure I'm going to hit the last rep I will rack the weight, wait 20ish seconds, and then do the final rep. It's really just hard to push the same volume with dumbbells, you don't want to short change yourself.6
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Bench in a squat rack with the safety bars set at the height to rest the bar if you cannot complete the lift21
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I have a home gym and workout by myself. I dont have someone to spot me but I bench press in my squat rack as mentioned above just in case but never needed it really. I would say do them and when you notice that your having trouble take extra rest and try again or a little less weight extra reps.3
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Ask someone. I find that 5 reps and up is not really weight that I would need a spotter on anyway. Sometimes toward the end of a cycle 5's can get tricky but it wouldn't be every time.
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I did the AllPro programme that increases reps before weight and has a heavy, medium and light day.
By the time it was time to increase my weight I was confident doing so without a spotter.
Cheers, h.
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I train with bench press regularly without a spotter. But it is not with heavy weights and low reps. It is moderately heavy and 8 to 12 reps. I just don't take it all the way to failure. I can tell when I have one, maybe 2 reps left and that's where I stop.
If I'm going heavy or testing 1RM, I wouldn't do it without a spotter. I'm always happy to spot for someone. That is just good gym etiquette.2 -
While I generally do more than 5 reps per set, I stop before I would get to the point of needing help.1
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5x5 is not meant to go to failure. If you are needing a spot every set, back off the weight. I bench all of the time with no spot. I'm by myself, so I have to be safe. Benching with safety bars is another option, so is not using pins. If you can't complete the rep, let the plates slide off.9
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Great advice--thanks, everyone!1
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I aim for 5 reps on the bench press, I simply stop when I am unsure if I can succeed on the next rep and that is okay, you still make gains and it's less taxing on the body then going for failure on every rep and you have less chances of getting injured too. That is still a big win in my books.1
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I only ask for a spotter if I know there is a high likelihood I'm going to fail. But I've failed plenty of times without a spotter. Most times I can rack it on the lower pins. Once or twice I've had to do the roll of shame. Of course I'm not lifting significant weight, so no danger of really hurting myself.2
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mom23mangos wrote: »I only ask for a spotter if I know there is a high likelihood I'm going to fail. But I've failed plenty of times without a spotter. Most times I can rack it on the lower pins. Once or twice I've had to do the roll of shame. Of course I'm not lifting significant weight, so no danger of really hurting myself.
I've done the roll of shame myself3 -
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In addition to using a power cage for benching, you could see if your gym has adjustable stands like below. There are a few different types, so they might not look exactly like these. With just the empty bar, you can figure out how high you need them for safety. Make a note of how they're set up, so you can just walk in and set them up right away in the future.
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Never use collars when benching without spotters so you can dump the weight.
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I use a power cage I picked up cheap on gumtree. It has catchers. I tend to train hard and up my weight around weekly but fractionally rather than big jumps. I’ve only been caught out once and I just rolled out from the bar on the catchers1
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crossfit_dottir wrote: »Don't use the collars to secure the weight, that way you can lift the bar on one side to slight the plates off and dump the weight.
Plenty of videos on youtube about dumping the weights during a bench press. Check them out if you're not sure how to do it.
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Simply just ask someone. I usually ask a person also benching so I can return the favor if needed.
Being close to failure can be a tricky assumption especially if you're a novice. Better being safe then sorry. Also using a weight that is challenging but holds good form is going to give the appropriate stress for progressive strength training.3 -
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Look if they can ask me all the time then I can ask them. My problem is most people can't spot worth a damn. Then you have to tell them what you want or else they'll f**k your s**t up! Plus if I have to educate someone on how to spot it's throws me off if I'm maxing out. Basically I tell them to keep an eye on me, only grab it if I tell you to.
So you have never gone to failure and there's no need to, some of you say. Hmm...so how do you know to stop one rep short(meaning you're shorting yourself), how do you know you can't do what you did last time or can, you don't ever do negatives? So in reality you're not a bencher just a workout guy going for a certain number of reps quitting just shy of failure, but how do you know that rep was the failure rep?
And to have a program for the bench that never takes you near failure isn't a bench program. Plus even if you're doing one of those programs what if something happens with a lesser weight? Accident's happen. Find a partner and a new program.
So you people have never failed during a workout? How do you know something for sure unless you've tried it? Failure is what you build upon. If you don't know failure, how do you know success? If you've never failed, how do you know what's possible?
Yeah I know, I'm a smart @zz today. JMHO7 -
Look if they can ask me all the time then I can ask them. My problem is most people can't spot worth a damn. Then you have to tell them what you want or else they'll f**k your s**t up! Plus if I have to educate someone on how to spot it's throws me off if I'm maxing out. Basically I tell them to keep an eye on me, only grab it if I tell you to.
So you have never gone to failure and there's no need to, some of you say. Hmm...so how do you know to stop one rep short(meaning you're shorting yourself), how do you know you can't do what you did last time or can, you don't ever do negatives? So in reality you're not a bencher just a workout guy going for a certain number of reps quitting just shy of failure, but how do you know that rep was the failure rep?
And to have a program for the bench that never takes you near failure isn't a bench program. Plus even if you're doing one of those programs what if something happens with a lesser weight? Accident's happen. Find a partner and a new program.
So you people have never failed during a workout? How do you know something for sure unless you've tried it? Failure is what you build upon. If you don't know failure, how do you know success? If you've never failed, how do you know what's possible?
Yeah I know, I'm a smart @zz today. JMHO
I used calculations from AMRAPS and volume PRS to adjust my 1rm. I test my 1 rm few times per year, most likely on the platform. Testing it constantly in the gym may stifle my effort if it is fatiguing. I bench 4x per week.1 -
I have never done the roll of shame but have come very close. I have been close to it many times but have been able to muster enough to hit the bottom pins. I have given up on the barbell bench press as a staple and stick to exclusively dumbbell for my chest work. I will on occasion do the odd BB bench to see if it has increased any from last time.0
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I just max on the dumbbells and go light on the bar5
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Had to do the roll of shame once. (I don't currently bench enough weight that there would have been any danger of suffocating though-so have never bothered to request a spotter..wouldn't be a feasible option at higher weights).
On the dumbbells- you have a lot less control of the weight when you get close to failure..so you do run the risk of F'ing up your shoulder if not careful dropping the weight or of a weight coming down on yourself with a bit more speed than with a barbell.
ETA: I use the dumbells more often than the barbell despite the above.0 -
Look if they can ask me all the time then I can ask them. My problem is most people can't spot worth a damn. Then you have to tell them what you want or else they'll f**k your s**t up! Plus if I have to educate someone on how to spot it's throws me off if I'm maxing out. Basically I tell them to keep an eye on me, only grab it if I tell you to.
So you have never gone to failure and there's no need to, some of you say. Hmm...so how do you know to stop one rep short(meaning you're shorting yourself), how do you know you can't do what you did last time or can, you don't ever do negatives? So in reality you're not a bencher just a workout guy going for a certain number of reps quitting just shy of failure, but how do you know that rep was the failure rep?
And to have a program for the bench that never takes you near failure isn't a bench program. Plus even if you're doing one of those programs what if something happens with a lesser weight? Accident's happen. Find a partner and a new program.
So you people have never failed during a workout? How do you know something for sure unless you've tried it? Failure is what you build upon. If you don't know failure, how do you know success? If you've never failed, how do you know what's possible?
Yeah I know, I'm a smart @zz today. JMHO
I used calculations from AMRAPS and volume PRS to adjust my 1rm. I test my 1 rm few times per year, most likely on the platform. Testing it constantly in the gym may stifle my effort if it is fatiguing. I bench 4x per week.
Do your calculations put you pretty close at a meet? I've been training my nephew for the past 5 years, but he is gaining muscle so fast it's hard to gauge him. I power lifted for 12 years, stopped at age 34, I'm 51 now. Would love to do one more meet.2 -
Am I the only person who just yells out, "Help!"6
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Look if they can ask me all the time then I can ask them. My problem is most people can't spot worth a damn. Then you have to tell them what you want or else they'll f**k your s**t up! Plus if I have to educate someone on how to spot it's throws me off if I'm maxing out. Basically I tell them to keep an eye on me, only grab it if I tell you to.
So you have never gone to failure and there's no need to, some of you say. Hmm...so how do you know to stop one rep short(meaning you're shorting yourself), how do you know you can't do what you did last time or can, you don't ever do negatives? So in reality you're not a bencher just a workout guy going for a certain number of reps quitting just shy of failure, but how do you know that rep was the failure rep?
And to have a program for the bench that never takes you near failure isn't a bench program. Plus even if you're doing one of those programs what if something happens with a lesser weight? Accident's happen. Find a partner and a new program.
So you people have never failed during a workout? How do you know something for sure unless you've tried it? Failure is what you build upon. If you don't know failure, how do you know success? If you've never failed, how do you know what's possible?
Yeah I know, I'm a smart @zz today. JMHO
I used calculations from AMRAPS and volume PRS to adjust my 1rm. I test my 1 rm few times per year, most likely on the platform. Testing it constantly in the gym may stifle my effort if it is fatiguing. I bench 4x per week.
Do your calculations put you pretty close at a meet? I've been training my nephew for the past 5 years, but he is gaining muscle so fast it's hard to gauge him. I power lifted for 12 years, stopped at age 34, I'm 51 now. Would love to do one more meet.
Yep. At this point I've had programs written for me, so I can put my estimated max based on AMRAPS or a max I have hit in the gym/meet into my excel programming, and then run a percentage based program for 9 weeks based on that max, and come out with a PR on meet day...if I'm not having a rough meet.
You should do one!1 -
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