Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 240: Machines That Are *BETTER* Than Free Weights
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Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast.
In today's episode, we are going to be going over some of my favorite non-free weight movements,
talking about machines, whether they be plate loaded or selectorized. Those are the ones that
you adjust the pin on. We'll be talking about cable movements. And I'm doing this because I
am a huge proponent of resistance training and specifically free weight training. I've trained
clients for years using a combination of free weights, machines, cables, barbells, dumbbells,
free weights, machines, cables, barbells, dumbbells, kettlebells, you name it. And I think every single tool in your toolbox has value. And my goal with this episode is to expand your
repertoire, to give you more arrows in your quiver, to encourage you to include more machine training
in your workouts. I know how awesome free weights are. I know that the requirement of intermuscular
coordination and intramuscular coordination to create stability, get muscles working together
in concert, to work against a somewhat variable load is amazing. There is no substitute for free
weight training. That's not what I'm saying. But if you're a bodybuilder, you're interested in
muscle growth, you want to optimize for output, you maybe have joint sensitivity or pain.
Machines can be a wonderful tool to help you get more out of your training. So much so sometimes
that I think there are machine movements that are better, equal, or at least versatile enough
to replace their free weight counterpart. And what I want to do
is encourage you to use these machines specifically, these devices specifically,
so as to enhance the quality of your training in the long run. Not replace free weight counterparts
that hit the same movement, but perhaps encourage you to include these every once in a while. And
this is something that I do a lot with our online clients at Core Coaching Method in our app training communities. We're
constantly cycling exercises through so as to keep people from going insane, but also so as to
really reap the benefits of how machines work, how cables work, how free weights work,
picking which exercises we apply really a ton of progression to and get heavy on,
whereas selecting ones that might be better for catching a pump. So we're going to go through a
list of exercises that you can do with machines and cables that I think are amazing and should
definitely be added to your program. The first exercise on this list is the cable chest fly
using a dual arm cable machine. So these are the machines that come
with two arms that can basically be oriented in three-dimensional space moving in and out on an
x and y axis. You can adjust both arms independently, but for this exercise, we're looking at setting
them up in an abducted position where the arms are out and away from the base of the machine.
And your arms are going to do the same. You're going to pull the cables together
so as to bring your chest muscles into the most shortened position. A lot of times,
this is done using a pec deck, which is a machine with kind of fixed arms that's designed
specifically for this movement. It's not as versatile as a dual cable, or it's done on a bench with dumbbells. This is, of course, known as a dumbbell cable fly.
Now, both of these movements are good. Both the dumbbell cable fly and the machine pec fly are
good. I would say that the dumbbell fly is probably below average, not going to hurt you.
Suboptimal for loading the pec for a variety of reasons,
the primary of which is that it's extremely hard at the bottom and almost negligible amount of
resistance at the top in the shortened position. The pec deck's cool, but it can be a little bit
funky in terms of getting the optimal position and arm path because it's so fixed. And this is
why the cable pec fly on a dual cable kind of separates itself as being a really great tool for training that
kind of isolated function of bringing the arm to the midline, that humerus coming across. We call
that, it's also going to medially rotate the humerus, but we're going to bring the arm to
the midline. Okay. We're going to translate the arm to the front of the body. We're going to do
both at the same time, finishing with our arms almost touching and really contract our pecs. And the reason I love this is because when
you do this with a cable, you have a resistance profile that's very consistent, meaning you don't
have a huge drop off at the bottom and almost no weight at the top the way you do when you do it
with a dumbbell. So the first exercise on the list is the cable chest fly. And I love this exercise for anybody who wants to develop a better looking
chest, who wants to develop muscle in their chest, who wants to increase their strength on
pressing movements. So this is a great accessory movement for that. I really like this movement
for anybody who might be sensitive to a lot of pressing, but they still want to challenge their chest in a way that
maybe you would like to use less weight. So great exercise all around, very versatile. And of the
fly movements or of the movements that one would do for the chest that are flies, dumbbells,
peck deck, and cable, I think this one reigns supreme by far. Sticking with the cables,
I think this one reigns supreme by far. Sticking with the cables, we're going to talk about the cable lateral raise, Y raise, and front raise. And I really like dumbbell laterals, dumbbell Ys,
and dumbbell front raises. We program them a lot. I think they're great. And I would say
these two are more evenly matched than the dumbbell fly and the cable fly. But I really like cable wise, cable laterals and cable fronts for the same reason.
You have a resistance profile that's a little bit more consistent.
There's so few exercises you can really do to challenge and develop the shoulders.
Like when it comes to legs, you've got squats, you've got lunges, you've got hinges, you've
got hack squats, you've got leg presses.
You know, they're all variations of squatting and hinging essentially,
but there's tons to choose from in the compound department. When it comes to shoulders,
it's like overhead pressing, which isn't super comfortable for everybody due to range of motion
and various limitations. You've got upright rows, which can be very challenging depending on your
mobility and how comfortable you are doing that. And then you have the races, you've got rear delts,
medial delts, front delts. And so you've got raises throughout those planes, you know,
all the way from the front of the body, all the way out to the side and back of the body
that essentially train those deltoid heads. And then of course you have shrugging and face pulls,
which can work some of the upper back posterior elements of the shoulder, but you're limited in how many movements we have for these
muscles due to their architecture and due to the unique way we have to load them. So assuming,
you know, you're like, huh, well, I know that raises are very effective and very comfortable
for most people. What if I had more of a library in terms of the types of
raises I'm doing? And you guys would be shocked at how many clients we bring on and work with
that have never done a cable lateral raise before or a cable front raise before.
And I think these movements are amazing for simply expanding the number of shoulder exercises you
have to choose from. Like I said, I don't think that
these two comparatively, the dumbbell raise and the cable raise are as far apart in terms of their
efficacy as the dumbbell chest fly and the cable chest fly. I do believe that the dumbbell and
cable chest fly are substantially farther apart with the chest fly on the cable being better. But these are a great way
to either adjust the resistance profile so that it feels more consistent, try something new,
expand a little bit on what it is that you can incorporate and do routine. And these exercises
are really, really, really easy to do. If you can't get the dumbbells you need, maybe you can
find a cable machine
and just try replacing your dumbbell raises with these. Give it a try once or twice. I think that
you'll enjoy them. What's going on, guys? Taking a break from this episode to tell you a little
bit about my coaching company, Core Coaching Method. More specifically, our app-based training.
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I have more teams coming planned for a variety of different fitness levels. But what's cool about this is when you join these programs,
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Back to the action. The next one, another cable movement, is the overhead cable tricep extension.
You can do this with a rope. You can do this with the dual cable as well. But what I like this
exercise for is hitting that long head of the tricep where the shoulder is usually going to be in a
position that the elbows are overhead. And when the elbows go up and overhead, what tends to happen
is that long head of the tricep, which actually attaches to the shoulder blade, it attaches to
your scapula. It gets put into a position where it can be loaded a little more efficiently.
And oftentimes what people will do is they will try to hit this muscle using a dumbbell overhead extension,
which is okay, and a skull crusher, which is okay. I prefer to do skull crushers with dumbbells than
I do the easy bar, but both of these movements can be tricky if you have elbow pain. So as somebody
who's dealt with chronic elbow pain on and off for the better part of my entire training career
due to hypermobility and loading too much, too many heavy bench presses into hyper elbow extension.
I dealt with some elbow sensitivity early on, and it was very challenging for me to train my triceps
if I did not have a consistent resistance profile. Meaning if I had a movement like a skull crusher
that was really, really hard at the bottom
and put my elbow into position where there's a lot of stretch on that tendon, I'd be very
uncomfortable. And so I did a lot of traditional rope extensions for triceps, which challenged the
triceps quite a bit with an even resistance profile. But once I switched to doing some
overhead ones as well, I found my elbows got a little stronger in that exposed position.
They felt a little more comfortable than some of the other ones. And so this is one that I
actually think is a good beginner option. If you ultimately want to do skull crushers
or dumbbell overhead extensions for any reason, you can try starting here and it will really,
really make a big, big difference. I like this one a lot. And I just think as far as tricep exercises go,
it's definitely worth throwing into the mix because it can be really comfortable
and it can be really good at hitting that long head of the tricep.
Okay. This one is a machine. It's usually selectorized, but occasionally you'll find
a plate loaded model, but I tend to prefer selectorized because that's going to involve
cables, going to allow for a more consistent resistance profile.
If you do it plate loaded, there tends to be huge drop-offs in where it's hard and where it's easy.
And this is the leg extension.
And the reason this is a great exercise for the quadriceps is it tends to be the best way to hit the quadriceps in the shortened position.
There's also some really good data to support that doing isometric holds in the leg extension can be beneficial for patellar tendinopathy. So if you have knee pain,
a lot of people say avoid this machine, but sometimes just holding the shortened position
where the muscle is contracted with lightweight, building up isometric strength can be really,
really valuable. This is obviously a great tool for bodybuilding. Any exercise that allows you
to hit a muscle in its shortened position hard tends to be really good for getting a pump and really good for
feeling the sensation and developing a mind muscle connection. So this is a really powerful tool for
that. But, you know, we've got squats, we've got lunges, and some people just don't have the
capacity to do those because of a lack of stability, because of a lack of, you know,
perhaps integrity around the knee. Maybe they need to build up some strength first.
And while the leg extension might not be optimal, depending on what's causing your knee pain,
it can be a very excellent exercise for developing strong quads and getting a nasty pump in the
shortened position. Another thing a lot of people like to do for leg day is to get a really, really
big leg pump. And most of the quad exercises people for leg day is to get a really, really big leg pump.
And most of the quad exercises people choose from, like squatting, lunging, and leg pressing,
and hack squatting, can be really challenging to do at high reps without incurring massive
amounts of cumulative or overall fatigue. Now, the leg extension, on the other hand,
doesn't seem to cause or present as large of a problem
with this because it's a little bit easier. It's a little bit simpler. It's an isolation exercise.
It's a single joint exercise. So this can be a phenomenal exercise for different people.
And it's been really, really bastardized as being more dangerous than I think it is.
So again, you can try isometrics. You can try using it to get a huge, huge pump.
You can do drop sets with it. And it is truly the best exercise for training the legs on the quad
specifically in their shortened position. Okay. The next movement on this list, another machine,
this one is almost always best plate loaded. There are multiple variations of this.
And it is the leg press. There are horizontal leg presses where you're pressing the leg press on a very horizontal plane. There are entirely vertical leg presses where your back is flat
and your feet are perpendicular to the floor and it's coming up and down. And then there are angled
leg presses where sometimes you're pressing up and away from the body on a diagonal. And of these
options, I do prefer diagonal and horizontal over vertical. I don't so much like the leg presses
where you're flat on a pad and lowering the weight directly down from over, like on top of you
perpendicularly, because typically at the bottom, you are going to have some lumbar flexion that
occurs when doing that. And that can present some potential danger
and injurious potential at higher reps and at higher weights. But I do find leg presses to be
quite safe. One thing you might note if you have high blood pressure is that it's oftentimes a
good idea to be careful about leg press intensity because the leg press does put you in a position
where you can really see big spikes in blood pressure. But what I like about the leg press does put you in a position where you can really see big spikes in
blood pressure. But what I like about the leg press is it's stable, unlike a squat. It is a
two-legged hip extension, knee extension pattern, but it is knee extension dominant. So you are
going to get a lot of quads when doing the leg press. You can adjust your foot position more or
less to bias the glutes or to bias the quads.
I used to believe that you could bias the hamstrings by moving your feet up relatively
high on the platform.
I don't so much believe that now.
Instead, I try to focus almost exclusively on keeping my feet in the center of the platform,
somewhat close to bias the glutes, or a little bit wider and lower on the platform with my feet out
to bias the quads. That is a kind of basic run of the mill. The lower your feet are on the platform,
the more quads, the upper, higher up you go, the less quads. You can't get a ton of hamstring just
by going to the top. If your feet are relatively close together, I find you can get quite a bit
of glute, especially on those diagonal ones and
especially on those horizontal ones. Now, I like the leg press because it's stable and can pull
yourself into the pad. You can create a lot of pelvic stability. You can do it single-legged,
which a lot of people forget that you can do many leg presses unilaterally. So that's awesome.
It's a great way to create pelvic stability and play around with unilateral training for novices. You can load it pretty, what I would describe as pretty virtually.
There's cable versions, which aren't as usually good as plate loaded versions,
but you're starting usually with a sled that weighs anywhere between 45 to 100 pounds that's
on the machine. And then you can go up from there and it tends to be pretty accessible.
Another thing I really love doing on leg presses that not too many people think about or talk about is calf raises.
And I mean specifically calf raises that bias the gastrocnemius. So there's two muscles in the calf,
the soleus and the gastrocnemius. The soleus is trained best when doing a seated calf raise where
the knees are bent. When the knees are bent, you'll
use quite a bit more soleus. The standing calf raise, which is oftentimes done in a standing
calf raise machine, biases the gastrocnemius or the calf muscle, the two-headed calf muscle.
You need to have both pretty strong and pretty hypertrophied to have nice looking calves,
by the way, but standing calf raises is going to develop the muscle that's more closer to the
surface. So if you want to have calves that pop, maybe you're going to the beach really soon
and you want to have good looking calves, I'd spend a little more time doing standing calf
raises or calf raises where your knees are extended, which you can do wonderfully on a leg
press. You can do these on the horizontal, but they tend to work best on the diagonal.
And what I love about this is I find that most standing half raises create a ton of compression upward on, on your like mid to lower
trap cervical spine area, uh, upper thoracic spine, just cause you're stepping into them.
And it's like putting on a pair of really heavy shoulder pads. When you do it on a leg press,
you can just do that range of motion of dorsiflexion, getting that big stretch,
getting that big contraction. And the weight isn't on your shoulders. It isn't on your back.
It doesn't feel uncomfortable. You're substantially less likely to bounce up and down.
So love the leg press, love doing it unilaterally, love using it to bias quads and glutes,
and even love it for standing calf raise variations or knee extended calf raise variations. Very, very good machine
worth having in your repertoire. And again, another one, much like the leg extension that gets a bad
wrap. A lot of people say it's bad for your knees. And I just do not find that to be true. I think
it's a very, very safe and effective exercise. Sticking with the lower body exercises,
let's talk about the hamstring curl machines, both the seated and the lying hamstring curl.
I think these are really, really effective. Remember, the hamstrings have two primary
functions, hip extension and knee flexion, just like the quads perform hip flexion and knee
extension. So these two muscles, the quads and the hamstrings are considered to essentially be antagonistic. They both do the exact opposite of one another, just like the
biceps and triceps. So much so that the biceps femoris is a hamstring muscle, right? And the
quadricep muscle acts almost exactly like the triceps in your arm to extend the knee in the
same way it extends the elbow. But what's tricky about training the hamstrings is it's very easy to train hip extension with free weights, right? You can easily train Romanian
deadlifts, dumbbell Romanian deadlifts, right? The phenomenal exercise that challenges the
hamstrings in their length and position. But how do we train that knee flexion with free weights?
Well, it's a little tricky. You can use apparatus like a lying or gliding hamstring curl.
You can use a Swiss ball or exercise yoga ball,
though that's not a free weight.
You could do a Nordic hamstring curl,
which is quite challenging and very advanced.
Many people just simply can't do these.
We do occasionally program them in our programming groups
or occasionally program them for online clients.
But I would say that of all
the exercises we program that we need to substitute or adjust, this is probably the number one one
that we have to adjust is the Nordic. So that's where these machines really come into play.
They are the most efficient and effective way to train the knee flexion element of the hamstring.
So you can do them lying on your stomach, which is harder in
the shortened position, or you can do them seated, which is harder in the lengthened position. When
you're seated, your hips are flexed. So the hamstring is really lengthened quite a bit
because remember they're a hip extensor. So when you put the hip into flexion,
the opposite, you're going to stretch them. When you put the hips into extension,
you're going to shorten them. So when you're seated, you're going to really hit the hamstrings hardest as knee flexors in the lengthened position. And when you
are lying down, you're going to hit the hamstrings hardest as knee flexors in the shortened position.
And both of these exercises are really, really effective for adding a little bit of extra volume
to your hamstring work that let's be honest, doesn't have to be hip extension biased and
doesn't require you use a
ton of weight. Because the tricky thing about RDLs, even if you try to get creative with it and cutesy
with it by doing B stance options, which are great because it can allow you to kind of shift away
from all the heavy loading required to have an effective stimulative set of an RDL, you're
probably going to have to use a lot of weight to train them because they're quite strong. And the
more strong you get, the more weight you need to use to challenge a heavy hip extension
biased movement like an RDL. So love those machines for that. Speaking of hip extension,
let's talk about the Smith machine hip thrust. So perhaps the most hated on machine in the gym
is the Smith machine. You're going to have a bar that's moving up and down on a fixed track,
the Smith machine, you're going to have a bar that's moving up and down on a fixed track,
usually vertically. Occasionally, you will have some slant, whether that be a slant in or a slant out, can really depend on how you set up. But let's just, for the sake of argument,
assume that this Smith machine is moving perfectly vertical. I like doing my hip thrusts
on the Smith machine because when you do them with a barbell, it's very hard to maintain a straight
bar path. And because the glutes are so strong, it's extremely, extremely easy to get three,
four, five, six plates, seven plates on a hip thrust and finding the perfect center
with that much weight on a free weight hip thrust and trying to maintain your spinal integrity and
your bench positioning is a pain
in the ass. Being able to outsource that stability to something like a hip thrust machine can be
really, really valuable. So imagine all the cues are the same. We want vertical shins at the top.
We want our chin tucked. We want to reach posterior pelvic tilt and maximize our hip
extension at the top of the movement. On a free weight, I've got to make sure I'm holding that bar perfectly in my lap. I got to make sure I'm perfectly in the middle of
it. I got to put my clips on. I got to make sure that I'm controlling the eccentric. All of these
things are easier when done on a Smith machine. So we've programmed a lot more Smith machine hip
thrusting in the last two years than ever, because we just believe it's that much more effective
or that much more valuable of a tool. Now, occasionally we will have clients do heavier
barbell hip thrusts for that strength, for that stability, and a lot of women just love it. They
love doing it on a freeway, feel a little more visceral. Men too. Nothing wrong with doing them.
We have just found we really, really like them on the Smith machine. And the last machine option here, another chest one, surprisingly, is actually the converging
chest presses. So these are often plate loaded. And when I say converging, they're chest presses
where the arms will at the end point be closer together than they were at the beginning.
There are some that are straight out in front of you, which I don't love. There are some that don't move at all. I like ones that converge where
the arms are going to move closer together because remember, the chest is going to pull the humerus
towards each other in front of the body. So if you have those converging arm paths,
those work really, really well. And so I love those plate loaded incline.
Decline can be a little tricky, but I like converging chest presses. And you can emulate this with a cable just by wheeling a bench over and using that dual
cable that you'd use for the fly.
A few honorable mentions for this list.
I like chest supported rows, particularly plate loaded.
I think those can be a really effective tool.
And I do prefer them in
most instances to barbell rows, barbell rows. I still quite like, I really like Pendlay rows for
strength and power, but chest supported rows, even one arm dumbbell rows are preferable in my opinion
for most clients. If they want to get a strong training stimulus out of their upper back while having minimal amount of fatigue to recover
from the way you might when doing something like a barbell row. Another machine that I like is
actually the assisted pull-up machine. Now you can use bands or you can just do a lat pull down,
but a lot of people would like to work towards their first pull-up. And many gyms do have an
assisted pull-up machine
that allows you to gradually use less weight to support you on your pull-ups. So that's a really,
really good option that I like quite a bit. Another machine I like is the Preacher Curl.
It's actually just a bench, but it holds your arms in front of the body in flexion, which allows you
to really challenge your biceps quite a bit.
And I really like doing preacher curls for bicep growth. So that's a list guys of some machine
slash non-free weight movements that I quite like a lot for helping you kind of add some more arrows
to your quiver, so to speak, and expand what it is that you're doing in your training. I want to
thank you all so much for tuning in. Encourage you to leave a five-star rating and review on Apple Podcasts and on Spotify,
and I will catch you on the next one.