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DIPS AND CHINS

Posted Friday, November 04, 2005

Filed under Chest

by Vince Gironda

I do not think I have seen six men in my life do a chin properly. Don Howorth was one of them. Don pulled up with his chest high and touched his chest to the bar almost as low as his low Pec line. His elbows were drawn down to his sides, touching his lats, and with the chest high and the shoulders down and back, he contracted his lats to the maximum.

If you look up the function of the lat in any Kinesiology book, it will show that the lat – in the fully contracted position – the shoulders are drawn down and back! Round the back and shoulders forward, and you shift to the Teres major muscles. Also, if you do not arch your back to full contraction, you will not develop any of the fibres across the back that attach to the spine. This will give you a flat underdeveloped look with no thickness.

This is how you do the chin: Reach up and grasp the chinning bar, but not too wide…closer than you ordinarily do them, because the lats are partially contracted in a wide grip. Next, stand on a box so that you can jump up into the contracted position and hold at the top for a split second. Now, lower your body and stand on the box (Do singles). Jump up again and touch your low pec to the bar and arch the back. Most important – elbows must touch the sides in the top or contracted position to achieve maximum contraction.

The next most abused exercise is the parallel dip for pec development. The average bodybuilder does this exercise with his elbows back and his chest up and the back arched. Also, he does not drop down low enough, plus his body usually swings due to excessive speed in pec – forming the exercise. The proper way to dip is as follows: Hands should be 32” wide, elbows straight out to the sides (never back), and chin on chest. Chest must be concave and back rounded, feet forward under the head. In short, the body is in a crescent shape. The bottom of the dipping movement is the most important part of the dip; the first 8-10 inches are very isolated pec and most important – dipping receives less help from the deltoid than any other pec exercise. Bench Press plus Incline Dumbell Press – knuckles not facing each other but forward, about 90 percent assistance from delts. The wider the parallel bar, the wider the stress on the pec where the pec disappears under the front deltoid. This gives the chest a greater illusion of width.

Here, in Vince’s Gym, we have V-shaped parallel dip bars and by just moving your hands back you get a wider portion of the pec. By the way, if you hump up your back at the top of the movement, you work the Serratus muscles very forcibly.

 

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Reader Comments

Vince was not only right about the dips, but light years before his time. I only wish I had spent time READING Gironda before spending ten years fooling around in the gym.

I have spent the past six months putting AS MANY of Vince's principles into practice. My pics prove it on my site:

www.geocities.com/michaelwstewart/fitness.html

The site is under construction so I only have my before and after pics up now, but there are more to come.

Please note: I do NO bench pressing! My entire chest was built in six months with dips!

Vince's principles are not only bang-on, but line up correctly WITH THE MUSCLE GROUP. Why I never understood this I will never know. Vince knew that if you isolate the muscle group and dont overwork it, you would be successful.

And for all of you guys out there who beleive that Vince was an old fool from the old school - you need to google his name and take a look at his physique -- not grotesque, not ghoulish -- but aestetic, clean, pure lines apart from the grotesque/ghoulish insanity we see at so-called bodybuilding events today.

All the best.

Regards,
Mick Stewart

Posted at Saturday, February 18, 2006 8:54 PM by Michael Stewart



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