Lee said:On skull crushers, does it matter if you go down to your face or behind your head? I have long ass arms so its more natural for me to put it behind my head then go back up.
SofaGeorge said:For skullcrushers to hit the triceps - you have to aim at your face/forehead. If you go behind your head you roll the emphasis off your triceps. (A lot of people do this because it freaks them out to aim heavy weight at their face... unfortunately... it leads to them getting inferior results.)
They are called "skull crushers" for a reason.
punch said:The key is keeping your elbows in and move only foremarms up and down in a controled manner
SofaGeorge said:For skullcrushers to hit the triceps - you have to aim at your face/forehead. If you go behind your head you roll the emphasis off your triceps. (A lot of people do this because it freaks them out to aim heavy weight at their face... unfortunately... it leads to them getting inferior results.)
They are called "skull crushers" for a reason.
Lee said:so i guess ill just do em the way that is comfortable for me
Lee said:so i guess ill just do em the way that is comfortable for me
strider364 said:I just follow what's in the Arnold encyclopedia, bring them down to the forehead.
R CRUSHER said:so correct over comfort?
how long are you going to do a movement that uncomfortable.?
how many uncomfortable movents do you do?
SLOE~"some folks just be hard headed"
gymtime said:
No, do them correctly. If we all learned to do excercises based on comfort, we would all be cheating our way into substandard workouts.
louden_swain said:
This is horrible advice!!! There are multiple variations of this exercise!!
You are confused between two different types of pain. There is a muscle pain (lactic acid and tearing of the muscle fibers) and there is an injury related pain.
Why on earth would anyone perform a movement that is painful and that could risk injury?
I have been working out for 8 years and I have never performed so called skull crushers, because they are murder on my elbows. They cause tendonitis. When I perform the movement as a french press by going beyond the head I am able to keep the upper arm stationary plus get a much deeper stretch, which attacks the inner head of the triceps.
You are saying perform an exercise even if it can cause injury. Thats pure b**sh*t!!
gymtime said:
Louden, calm yourself. The man used the term "uncomfortable," not "painful." I cleared up the distinction in my last post.
gymtime said:
Louden, calm yourself. The man used the term "uncomfortable," not "painful." I cleared up the distinction in my last post.
louden_swain said:
I consider uncomfortable as negative injury related pain. When I perform squats, deads, or rows with heavy weight they are comfortable because I have the weight under control. However, I experience extreme burning and muscle fatigue when I perform these exercises. I don't consider this to be an uncomfortable pain.
As for french presses, I get a nice deep burn until I reach muscular failure, but I do not consider this to be uncomfortable. I can barely feel pain anymore because I have train for so many years. My CNS has been through it all.
Originally posted by gymtime
a little pain is part of the game. If that's too much for you well, I suggest you take up knitting.![]()
~ "so ya one of them smartass BB'er thinking they realy puttin' up some weight.......how bout i knit my knuckles on yo forehead.....that's the kinda skullcrusher" 
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