Wall handstand alignment check: what to look for from the side
Parallette Dips: What They Train Differently
Dips between two parallettes are often dismissed as a beginner exercise, but they have specific properties that make them valuable for intermediate trainees.
Range of motion: parallettes allow a deeper dip than most bar setups — your body can descend below hand height, which increases the range of motion and the stretch on the pectoral muscles. This full-range version is more demanding and more complete than a standard bar dip.
Wrist position: the neutral wrist position on parallettes is more comfortable for many trainees than the extreme extension required for floor dips. This allows more training volume without wrist fatigue.
Transition to L-sit dips: from a parallette dip position, you can hold an L-sit at the top of each rep. This combination trains the L-sit compression and the dip pressing in one movement. It's a high-skill combination that requires solid L-sit and solid dips as prerequisites.
For planche training: pseudo planche push-ups on parallettes are one of the most effective planche-specific exercises. The elevated position allows the lean angle and wrist position needed for the exercise to feel correct.
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