Straight-arm strength exercises ranked by difficulty
The Case for Rings Over a Bar
I trained on a bar exclusively for my first year and switched to rings as my primary equipment in year two. Here's my honest comparison after training both for a combined three years.
Rings win for upper body development. The instability demands significantly more stabilizer involvement in every push and pull movement. Ring push-ups, ring dips, and ring rows each hit more total muscle than their bar or floor equivalents. The transition cost is real — your strength will feel lower on rings initially — but you adapt and end up with more functional upper body strength.
Bars win for specific skills. Pull-up volume, muscle-up transitions, and tuck front lever work are generally easier to program on a bar, especially outdoors. The bar doesn't swing, which allows stricter isolation of the target movement.
The ideal setup is both. But if you had to choose one for home training, rings are more versatile. You can replicate more bar exercises on rings than ring exercises on a bar.
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