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Bodyweight Fitness

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

Parallel bars vs gymnastic rings: which should a beginner buy first?

Ring Turnout: Why It Matters and How to Build It

The 'rings turned out' (RTO) position — where from a parallel ring support you rotate your hands so thumbs point outward — is a standard in ring training for good reason. Here's the mechanical justification and how to build the habit.

In the RTO support position, the shoulder is externally rotated. External rotation positions the humeral head more centrally in the glenoid socket, which is the structurally strongest and most protected position for the shoulder under load. Training ring work in a non-turned-out position chronically internally rotates the shoulder, which increases impingement risk over time.

Building the strength for turnout: the external rotators (infraspinatus, teres minor) are often underdeveloped. Band external rotation exercises — with a light band, elbow at 90 degrees, rotating the forearm outward against resistance — build this capacity. Daily sets of 15-20 reps.

Practice turnout from your first ring session. The position feels unnatural initially and the strength isn't there for full turnout immediately. Work toward it progressively. Within 2-3 months, it should feel natural.

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