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Advanced Tuck Front Lever: How to Know When to Progress
The advanced tuck front lever is the position where most trainees spend the longest time — often 3-9 months. Here's how to know when you're actually ready to progress toward the straddle.
The standard: 3 consecutive sets of 15-second holds in the advanced tuck position, with proper form, in three separate training sessions. Not a one-off — consistent and repeatable.
Form check for the advanced tuck: the angle between the torso and the thighs should be approximately 90 degrees. Hips at bar height. Back parallel to the floor. If the hips are dropping, it's not a proper advanced tuck.
The next step test: attempt 5 seconds in the straddle position. If you can maintain form for 5 seconds in a straddle, the progression is appropriate. If you immediately collapse into a position that looks nothing like the target, you need more advanced tuck time.
Front lever raises as a test: if you can do 3 controlled front lever raises from hanging to advanced tuck and return, your dynamic strength is sufficient for the next static hold step.
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