How to read the result
Replace lat pulldown without losing the stimulus. The notes below show the assumptions behind that recommendation.
Replace lat pulldown without losing the stimulus. A good lat pulldown alternative keeps the training intent clear: target muscle, range, effort, and fatigue cost.
Replace lat pulldown without losing the stimulus. The notes below show the assumptions behind that recommendation.
Start with the reason for the swap, then choose an option that keeps the target stimulus. Good options include Pull-up, Assisted pull-up, One-arm cable pulldown.
Use lower-fatigue swaps when the target muscle needs work but the original lift is driving too much systemic or joint cost.
Keep it when performance is improving, joints feel fine, and equipment is available.
Do not count heavier reps if the movement turns into a torso heave.
It depends on why you are swapping. Common options include Pull-up, Assisted pull-up, One-arm cable pulldown.
Usually start with the same rep range and RIR, then adjust after one or two sessions.
Ranks alternatives by target muscle, equipment, fatigue cost, movement similarity, and the reason for replacing the exercise.
A good swap preserves the training intent unless pain or equipment forces a larger change.
Inputs are handled in the browser for the web tool experience. Jacked should only store lifting data when a user chooses to log it in the app.
Jacked does it for your whole workout: next-set targets, RIR, rest timing, warm-ups, PRs, and progress feedback.
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