Answer Fitness®: Practical Fitness Advice for Everyone
The inside-scoop on Diet, Exercise, Nutrition and Training for People Who Are Passionate About Fitness
Total Body Workout with Weight Machines | Workout Routines
June 15, 2008 on 1:33 pm | By Matt | In Workout Routines | 4 CommentsNot ready for the free weight room? This total body workout routine uses the most common weight machines at the gym to give your entire body a great workout in under 60 minutes.
Total body workouts (also known as “full body workouts”) are a great way to build muscle, burn fat, develop core stability and strength, and cut down on your overall time in the gym. Generally, total body workouts are most effective when they are built around compound, multi-joint exercises that use free weights like dumbbells and barbells.
But not everyone feels comfortable in the free weight room, and if you are just starting a resistance or weight training routine, it can take some practice to learn how to perform free weight exercises with good form. Weight machines can provide a way for newcomers to get a feel for basic form and movement, build a nice strength foundation, and eventually feel more comfortable transitioning into free weight exercises.
Incorporating weight training machines into your workout can also benefit advanced trainees as well, since machines allow you to go with heavier weight than you can typically use in a free weight lift. This can be useful for breaking training plateaus. And because weight machines don’t require you to swap out plates, you can typically move through your workout more quickly — a plus if you are pressed for time.
So by popular demand, I’ve created a version of my free weight full body workout that is adapted to give you a total body workout using weight machines alone. Actually, this workout uses a combination of multi station weight training machines, cable exercise machines and some body weight exercise equipment like chin/dip stations. With a few exceptions, the same rules and guidelines of that total body workout apply to this version. We’ll recap those a bit later.
But first, let’s take a quick look at the advantages and disadvantages of using weight machines, instead of free weights, as part of a total body workout routine.
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Weight Machines | A Visual Guide to Gym Weight Machines
June 15, 2008 on 11:04 am | By Matt | In Weight Machines | No CommentsWhat do all those different weight machines at the gym do? Learn to identify and use the most common weight machines.
Making sense of all of the fitness equipment available to you in the gym can be daunting, especially for beginners. Use this illustrated, visual guide to identify the most common weight machines and equipment in the gym.
Weight Machines for Your Chest
Chest Press Machine 

Chest Pec Deck/Chest Fly Machine

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Should I Use Free Weights or Weight Machines? | Weight Training Basics from Answer Fitness®
April 5, 2008 on 12:47 pm | By Matt | In Exercise, Weight & Resistance Training | 2 CommentsFree weights and weight machines each have their advantages and disadvantages. Learn how to use both to get great results in the gym.
Few issues are more hotly debated among health and fitness professionals than whether free weights are better than weight machines.
The good news is that you really don’t have to choose between the two, since they both can help you increase
strength, build muscle and increase muscle definition.
There are, however, differences between the two. And understanding these differences can help you make better decisions about when each type of equipment is appropriate for your weight training, and how often you want to include them in your workout routine.
The Advantages of Weight Machines
Weight machines are often the first choice of equipment for people who are new to weight and strength training. And this is for good reason.
Weight machines by design encourage good form, because they limit the range of motion to the specified exercise you are performing. They also isolate the specific muscle group you are targeting by disengaging secondary muscle groups that normally are called upon stabilize the body during performance of an exercise.
If you’ve never performed a bench press (a free weight exercise), for example, you may not be familiar with how to align your arms properly in relation to your body in order to perform the exercise effectively and with minimal risk of injury. A chest press machine, on the other hand, will ensure that your arms are positioned correctly and will give you a sense for how the movement should be performed.
By starting out on weight machines, you can work on get a feel for the exercise, which can then be applied to a free weight workout.
Machine weights also tend to allow you to use more resistance, because you aren’t limited by the smaller (and often weaker) stabilizer muscles that are called upon to balance a free weight. This can help you make bigger gains in strength, and can help beginners establish a more solid base before moving on to more challenging free weight movements.
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