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Bodyweight Fitness

— Getting strong without a gym membership
102 members Created Feb 2026

Tempo training in bodyweight: how to use it and when

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The Inverted Row at Different Angles

The inverted row is not a single exercise — it's a family of exercises across a range of body angles. Understanding this range lets you progress it continuously without needing equipment changes.

Steepest angle (most vertical): body nearly upright, like a standing cable row. Least demanding. Good for warm-up and beginners.

Moderate angle (45 degrees): the standard 'Australian pull-up.' A meaningful challenge for most trainees.

Horizontal: body parallel to the floor. This is the most demanding inverted row angle and approaches pull-up difficulty depending on hand position and ring vs bar.

Feet elevated: place feet on a box while horizontal. This shifts more weight to the upper body and increases difficulty beyond horizontal floor rows.

One foot: with feet elevated, balance on one foot. Increases instability and makes each rep slightly harder.

By moving through this range systematically, the inverted row can serve as a pulling exercise for beginners through to advanced trainees. Most people underutilize the harder variants and plateau unnecessarily.

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