Tuck Front Lever Row


Tuck Front Lever Row Example

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As the tuck front lever row, but performed with the body in a tucked position to make the exercise easier.

The Basics

The tuck front lever row is primarily used as a strength exercise. It is classified as a horizontal upper pull movement. It is more generally classified as a upper pull movement. Since it involves significant activation of multiple muscle groups, it is considered a compound exercise.


Related Exercises

The most common or basic version of the given exercise.

Alternative exercises are good replacements for the given exercise. They develop the same fitness component and/or muscle group but do so in a different way that may work better for you.

Similar exercises work some or all of the same muscles, but are different from the given exercise in a way that doesn't make them as good of a replacement as the alternative exercises.

Opposing exercises target the antagonist muscles or the opposite movement pattern of the given exercise. Useful for finding agonist/antagonist exercise pairings to reduce rest time and speed up workouts.

Dip

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Progression Performance Standards

As part of the Fitness Score System, many exercises have performance standards that are used in calculating your score in a particular component of physical fitness. Progression exercises often don't have individual performance standards as they are primarily used to modify the difficulty of the full move. To see progression standards for the Base Exercise, click the link for it in the Related Exercise section.

Muscular Endurance Standards By Body Weight

The tables show the reps or isometric hold times (in seconds) needed to reach each of the muscular endurance ranks at different body weights. The reps on the table are based on world records, ratios, and the average time needed to attain each rank. To see personalized standards for every exercise, check out the Muscular Endurance Standards page.

The amount of weight used to test for muscular endurance of some of the exercises is a percentage of body weight. The percentage was chosen to be memorable and to require a Novice to Intermediate level of strength so that most trainees could reasonably use it while not having to do an excessive amount of reps.

Male Reps

Beginner Novice Intermediate Advanced Elite
120 0 9 23 40 59
130 0 8 22 37 56
140 0 7 20 35 53
150 0 6 19 33 50
160 0 5 18 32 48
170 0 5 17 30 46
180 0 4 16 29 44
190 0 3 15 27 42
200 0 3 14 26 40
210 0 2 13 25 39
220 0 2 12 24 37
230 0 1 12 23 36
240 0 1 11 22 35
250 0 0 10 21 34
260 0 0 10 21 33

Female Reps

Beginner Novice Intermediate Advanced Elite
100 0 5 17 31 47
110 0 4 16 29 44
120 0 3 14 27 41
130 0 2 13 25 38
140 0 1 12 23 36
150 0 1 11 22 34
160 0 0 10 20 33
170 0 0 9 19 31
180 0 0 8 18 29
190 0 0 7 17 28
200 0 0 7 16 27
210 0 0 6 15 26
220 0 0 5 15 25
230 0 0 5 14 24
240 0 0 4 13 23