Ring dip progressions from box dips to full rings
Single-Arm Hanging: Building Toward One-Arm Work
Single-arm hangs — hanging from one hand while the body is supported by that arm alone — are an often-skipped step in one-arm pull-up preparation that builds essential strength. Here's the protocol.
The challenge: a one-arm hang requires not just grip strength but shoulder stability at full extension in one shoulder. The shoulder must resist the rotational force the body creates while hanging asymmetrically.
Progression: start with a light touch from the free hand on the hanging arm's wrist. This provides just enough stabilization to make the hang manageable. Build to 10 seconds before reducing the assist.
Reduction path: full wrist grip → fingertip touch → finger hover → full one-arm hang. Each step requires the previous to feel controlled for 15+ seconds.
What it builds: grip strength (obviously), but also the shoulder stabilization and lat engagement that transfers to one-arm pull-up work. The dead hang trains the bottom of the one-arm pull-up range, which is where many trainees are weakest.
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