Powerlifting training with pull-up bar (USA) #229

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A good plan is measurable, boring, and easy to repeat for weeks. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. Warm up 5–10 minutes, then do ramp-up sets for the first lift. When in doubt: do less, do it well, and recover properly.

This guide keeps the plan simple and repeatable so you can make progress. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Track reps and load so you can see progress instead of guessing. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. When in doubt: do less, do it well, and recover properly.

If you want results, consistency matters more than perfect details. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. When in doubt: do less, do it well, and recover properly.

This guide keeps the plan simple and repeatable so you can make progress. Most sets should end with 1–3 reps in reserve so you recover well. Most sets should end with 1–3 reps in reserve so you recover well. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. After 4–6 weeks, change one thing at a time so you know what worked.

A good plan is measurable, boring, and easy to repeat for weeks. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Track reps and load so you can see progress instead of guessing. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. After 4–6 weeks, change one thing at a time so you know what worked.

This guide keeps the plan simple and repeatable so you can make progress. Small weekly improvements compound over time. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. Most sets should end with 1–3 reps in reserve so you recover well. After 4–6 weeks, change one thing at a time so you know what worked.

If you want results, consistency matters more than perfect details. Track reps and load so you can see progress instead of guessing. Track reps and load so you can see progress instead of guessing. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. After 4–6 weeks, change one thing at a time so you know what worked.

A good plan is measurable, boring, and easy to repeat for weeks. Warm up 5–10 minutes, then do ramp-up sets for the first lift. Warm up 5–10 minutes, then do ramp-up sets for the first lift. Pick a schedule you can keep for 8+ weeks and protect it like appointments. When in doubt: do less, do it well, and recover properly.

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Example template

ExerciseSetsRest
DB press3x1090s
Pulldown3x1090s
Leg press3x122m
RDL3x102m

FAQ

How often should I do this?

2–4 days/week works for most people if you stay consistent.

How do I progress?

Increase reps first, then load, then sets—one variable at a time.

What if something hurts?

Reduce load, improve technique, and get coaching if needed.

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