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Primemuscle

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1600 on: May 22, 2021, 04:26:49 PM »
The Connection Between Banana and Bodybuilding
 FITNESS TIPS LOVERS 2:22:00 PM

 



If you are a gym buff, then you have probably heard that you should eat a banana before and after your work out. Yes, it’s true! A banana is a very important food for body builders and most of them do eat banana before and after their gym session. But what’s in the fruit? Is it because of its protein content? Protein is very essential in building muscles because it helps in muscular repair after an intense workout. Or is it because of the potassium? We all know that banana is very rich in potassium. Well, to know the truth, let’s see how much protein and potassium the banana contains.


 



The facts:

In an average sized banana, there would be about 400 mg of potassium and around 1 gram of protein. Now let us analyze if the protein content in a banana is sufficient enough to provide the protein needs of a bodybuilder post workout. According to studies, an average man needs 2 grams of protein/kg of body weight, and for athletes and bodybuilders, the requirement would be 3-4 gm protein/ kg of body weight. Considering the facts mentioned, we can safely conclude that eating banana after a workout has nothing to do about protein. Bananas are good source of potassium. 400 grams of potassium is actually 10 percent of the recommended potassium intake daily for the average man.


 
Electrolyte is lost during intense activities like in working out and potassium is one of those electrolytes. So eating a banana prior will help prevent too much potassium loss and eating one after workout replenish the potassium lost by the body. It will also prevent dehydration, muscular cramps and weakness which are common during excessive electrolyte loss.

So, there you go! Banana is important for bodybuilders because of its potassium content and not for its protein. To effectively improve your physique, eating a combination of banana and high protein foods like eggs, nuts and chicken breasts is the best thing to do.

Another way to accomplish getting a greater amount of protein with the potassium is to put the banana in the blender, pour your protein drink in and voila, you have a protein and potassium rich drink that tastes good (if you like the flavor of bananas).

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1601 on: May 22, 2021, 05:55:55 PM »
If I ever meet that fat fuck I guarantee you it will be the first thing I say to him

I honestly doesn't know why someone hasn't asked him that yet

Same goes for that closet queer Lindsey Graham

Second question for Graham would be why should anyone believe anything you say since we know your words mean NOTHING


No you wouldn't, you have O'Hearn balls.
Liar!!!!Filt!!!!

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1602 on: May 22, 2021, 06:49:38 PM »
If I ever meet that fat fuck I guarantee you it will be the first thing I say to him

I honestly doesn't know why someone hasn't asked him that yet

Same goes for that closet queer Lindsey Graham

Second question for Graham would be why should anyone believe anything you say since we know your words mean NOTHING



Hahahahahaha....you ain’t saying anything to anyone 😂

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1603 on: May 23, 2021, 01:15:38 PM »
An Early History of Barbells?
Where to begin when discussing the history of the barbell? Thankfully better, much better, minds than me have asked this question. One of the first academic studies of the barbell was written by Jan Todd, who traced the object to the mid-nineteenth-century when American and European strongmen and health promoters began to toy with the kind of implements needed to build strength, muscles and health.(2) Her findings were echoed by fellow strength chroniclers David Webster and more recently, Randy Roach, both of whom found little evidence of the barbells existence prior to the mid to late 1800s.(3) Why the delay, especially given the longevity of the dumbbell in human history?

Though it is nigh on impossible to discover why this was the case, there are some interesting factors to consider. While militaries had been using dumbbells and Indian clubs from the early 1800s, there was little need for progressively heavier weights at this time. Few individuals had the luxury or desire to dedicate to muscle building. Lightweight training, as was the norm during this period was primarily based upon improving agility and correcting postural issues.

[Does club swinging sound antiquated? Check out the surprising benefits of club training for strength.]

Secondly, the first public gymnasiums, as we would understand them, did not emerge until the mid-nineteenth-century when individuals had the time, money and interest to dedicate to heavy training. Prior to this light weights reigned supreme. There was little economic incentive then to producing barbells or some early iteration of them. This was certainly the experience of Donald Walker, who produced a rudimentary barbell in the mid-1830s.

In his fabulously titled and hugely popular 1834 work British Manly Exercises, Walker promoted Indian club swinging for men interested in both health and strength. Encouraged by the success of his first book, Walker next set his sights on female exercise. His later work, Exercises for Ladies, recommend the use of an ‘Indian scepter’ for exercises rather than an Indian club. Similar to a baton and only minimally weighted, the scepter was nevertheless an indication that barbells would one day have a future. Sadly for Walker, his scepter was quickly cast aside as British audiences proved much more interested in club swinging than scepter raising.(4)

[See the other side: The Untold History of Weight Training Machines.]

Mid-Century Progress

As Walker’s sceptres faded from the public’s memory, a wave of new developments in Europe, Britain and the US were occurring. In France in the 1880s, Hippolyte Triat, a strongman of note, opened his own gymnasium. This was not a regular, small-scale enterprise but rather one of the largest public gymnasiums of its kind. Due to Triat’s own interest and knowledge of strength building, his gymnasium was home to some rather remarkable innovations. Thankfully for us, Triat was not shy in promoting his wares. Advertisements for his gym made reference to ‘Barres À Spheres De 6 Kilos’ or ‘bars with spheres of six kilos’. For aspiring strongmen and women, Triat also made reference to ‘Gros Halteres et Barres À Deux Mains’ or ‘large dumbbells and bars for two hands.’(5)


We don’t know how heavy these ‘barres à deux mains’ were, although some sources cite dumbbells weighing up to two hundred pounds being found in Triat’s gym. Nor do we know where Triat drew his inspiration from. To return briefly to Jan Todd’s article on the subject, Professor Todd speculated that Triat may have drawn his designs from the sort of sceptres promoted by Walker and prior to him, the orthopedics of the eighteenth-century who likewise promoted them.(6) Triat himself was silent on this subject, at least as far as his historical record is concerned.

Triat was not the only individual using barbells during this time either. Karl Rappo, an Austrian strongman who performed in several states in the late 1840s and early 1850s, was likewise said to have used globe barbells during his routine. Unlike the modern plate loaded barbells, these objects were fixed in weight with two rounded balls on each end. They were the type of barbells we would envision when thinking about stereotypical Victorian era strongmen. Now what differentiated Rappo from Triat was the the Austrian did not run his own gymnasium.(7) As far as we can tell, Rappo didn’t advise members of the public to use barbells at any point during his career. The Austrian simply used them as part of his act where they were described, like Triat, as heavy dumbbells.

Keen eyed readers will have noticed however that neither Walker, Rappo nor Triat referred to the term ‘barbell’. The history of the term itself has been traced to a Madame Brennar whose 1870 Madamme Brennar’s Gymnastics for Ladies, A Treatist on the Science and Art of Calisthenics and Gymnastic Exercises was among the first to use the term ‘barbell’. Where Brennar got the idea from is sadly unknown but Brennar’s descriptions of her barbell bore a clear resemblance to the modern object. In describing the term for her audience, Brennar wrote of an ‘appliance [that] partakes partly of the ‘Wand,’ and partly of the Dumb-bell.’(8) These devices were between four and six feet in length and were thicker than the ordinary wooden wands being used for lightweight exercise. A cursory glance at British Newspaper Archives, an online resource containing thousands of old newspaper articles published in Britain, shows a huge growth in the term post 1870.(9) Whether or not Brennar was responsible for the popularization of the term, she was one of the first entrepreneurs to use it.

Barbell Curl Exercise Guide - Squeeze at the Top
The Birth of Modern Barbells
So Walker, Triat, Rappo and to a lesser extent Brennar paved the way for the birth of the modern barbell. What then, was the spark that finally set the lifting world ablaze?



As you can imagine, it’s difficult to pinpoint the man or woman responsible for creating the first modern, heavy barbells. What we can do however is highlight where they became popular. Edgar Mueller, an early German physical culture scholar, who incidentally wrote a fantastic book on Herman Görner, argued that Turner clubs in Germany were a pivotal arena in this regard. In describing old Turner gymnasiums in Munich from the late 1870s, Mueller noted that many of these gyms contained barbells with globe ends such as the one shown below.(10)





Unlike the barbell precursors found in Triat’s gym, those in Germany were modifiable, albeit with some considerable difficulty. The globes, positioned on both ends of the barbell, contained a small and sealable opening. To increase a barbell’s weight, lifters would pour shot or sand into the globe. While this may seem a trivial modification, it’s worth laboring its importance. The ability to lift heavier barbells meant that aspiring gym goers now had the potential to build more muscle and strength than ever before. Furthermore it lay the groundwork for the eventual emergence of weightlifting competitions from Olympic lifting to powerlifting. Being able to modify the weight of barbells meant that bodybuilding, CrossFit, strongman, and whatever else we do today, was possible.

Admittedly, this change was not without its problems. It was very difficult to evenly load shot or sand into the globe barbells. Furthermore, there were allegations a plenty that lifters were manipulating barbells in weightlifting competitions. After Arthur Saxon defeated Eugen Sandow in a series of lifts in the late 1890s, Sandow began claiming that Saxon had loaded the barbell with mercury which made its weight distribution incredibly uneven. This, Sandow claimed, was the reason Saxon had been able to best him. Barbells, even unevenly loaded ones, became a mainstay among strongmen.(11) An 1891 international weightlifting competition, covered previously on Barbend, is testament to this point. The regular gym goer, except for a privileged few, was still being neglected however. What was needed was an entrepreneur with a vision.




[Learn more about the founding father of fitness, in our bio of Eugen Sandow.]

American Exceptionalism?
Europe was undoubtedly a hotbed of lifting activity in the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century. This did not mean, however, that the United States was not equally vibrant. Of relevance for the present history, we should note that the Harvard and Boston strongman George Barker Windship, whose rack pull machine swept across mid-century America, also designed some makeshift barbells. Thanks to Jan Todd we know that in 1859, Windship devised his own shot loading weights to a makeshift dumbbell.(12) Like Triat’s heavy dumbbell, this allowed Windship to create a dumbbell whose weight could be increased at several turns.




A more significant American contribution to the weightlifting community came some time after that in the form of Alan Calvert, the founder of Milo Barbell. In 1902, Calvert began producing his own rudimentary barbell and dumbbell sets. Beginning with a small set of loyal customers, Calvert’s business and influence, began to grow. Through his advertising pamphlets, Calvert inadvertently created one of the first dedicated weightlifting magazines of its kind. Calvert’s greatest achievement however, was the creation of his Milo Triplex, a barbell whose weight could be easily adjusted. Calvert’s invention, as understood by Jan Todd and Kimberly Beckwidth, whose doctoral work on Calvert is available online, marked a seminal moment in the Iron Game.(13) Users now had access to affordable barbells, whose weight varied. Importantly Calvert’s design caught on.





Soon after, similar devices had emerged in Britain and mainland Europe. The same year the Milo Complex hit the market, a German inventor, Franz Veltum, produced a disk loading barbell. This, in effect, was an early version of the barbells we use today, whose weight can be adjusted by adding or removing plates from both ends. Veltum’s barbell was first marketed to German lifters in 1910 under the supervision of the Berg Company.(14) Somewhat frustratingly, it has proven impossible to discover if Veltum or Calvert was aware of each other at this time (Calvert began replicating Veltum’s bars from 1916). In any case, it is fascinating to think that Calvert produced a mass produced adjustable barbell at the same time that Veltum created a disc loading barbell. In time the affordability of Calvert’s creation would be joined with the practicality of Veltum’s.

Innovation Never Sleeps
Though several innovations would be made in the opening decades of the twentieth-century amongst the weightlifting community, an unsung hero in this regard was the simple barbell collar. These objects, placed on either end of the barbell, help to keep plates in place, and thereby ensure the weights do not fall off the bar. Are they simple? Of course. Are they vitally important? As someone whose laziness has resulted in plates and barbells wildly flying through the air during a shaky squat, I would argue yes.




Now admittedly, the barbell collar/clamp/clip is a small and very difficult thing for historians to pinpoint its exact history. What we can say is that around the 1910s, a series of British physical culturists, like Edward Aston, began marketing their own barbell clamps, which allowed plates to be added and subtracted from the bar with even more ease than before. So next time you’re loading up the bar, take a brief moment to thank Aston and his cohort!(15)

Returning briefly to Veltum, his disc loading barbell was slowly modified in the late 1920s when Kasper Berg, of the Berg Company, expanded its length to seven feet. This length is now the standard barbell length found in modern gyms. In response to complaints about the equipment being used in Olympic Weightlifting events, Berg submitted his new design to the Olympic powers that be. Much to his great delight, they proved impressed with its durability and design. The 1928 Olympics in Antwerp saw Berg’s barbell used in each of the weightlifting events.(16) When the Olympic committee commissioned Berg to provide barbells for future Olympics, his contemporary barbell manufacturers took notice. In time, seven feet, disc loading barbells were produced by York Barbell, Jackson Barbell and several other firms.




[Read more: What Are the Different Types of Barbells?]

The Modern Age
When talking about Olympic Weightlifting, there is, of course, a very obvious company which must be addressed, Eleiko. The iconic Eleiko barbells, which first emerged in the 1950s, are for many, the quintessential Olympic barbell. While the period from 1930 to 1950 had seen a series of barbell manufacturers emerge, there was still one problem facing the lifting community. In a problem I have sadly never encountered, barbells were breaking under the immense weights being attached to them.

This, admittedly privileged, problem was enough to force Mr. Hellström, an Eleiko employee during the 1950s, to put his thinking cap on. When not working in Eleiko, then a company most famous for its waffle makers, Hellström was an avid weightlifter with a frustration borne from faulty barbells. In seeking to build a new barbell design, and stop the regularity with which barbells broke once and for all, Hellström designed a reinforced barbell made with a specially hardened steel inspired by Eleiko’s products. When his employers were approached by Hellström about mass producing the product, they proved particularly enthused. Mass production began and in 1963, the Eleiko bar debuted at the Weightlifting World Championships in Sweden. Soon after it entered the Olympic realm and has, since then, become a favorite of lifters around the world.(17)




deadlift
Pretenders to the Crown?
So before concluding, it is important to stress that not everyone has proven enamored with the standard Olympic barbell. Take for example, Lewis Dymeck, who invented the EZ Bar during the late 1950s as a means of relieving pain from his elbows during arm work.(18) Likewise Al Gerard’s trap bar, created during the 1980s, sought to find a new and sounder way of deadlifting.(19) Prior to both of these inventions we had the cambered barbell in the 1920s, which eventually re-emerged as the safety bar squat during the 1980s thanks to Dr. Fred Hatfield. Each bar was invented to fix a perceived deficiency found in the regular barbell.(20)




Trap Bar Deadlift Exercise Guide - Middle Pull
To return to the introduction of this post, Rogue’s elephant bar, which captivated the lifting community during the 2019 Arnold Strongman, was built to address a new generation of lifting feats. Rogue, who only entered the lifting game in 2007, first built a nine ft. barbell capable of sustaining several hundred pounds, for the Arnold Strongman in 2016. The barbell, which bends under the immense weight it holds, has added an extra spectacle to the event. Aside from how impressive it looks, the elephant bar serves as a good reminder that the lifting community will continue to demand, and produce, variations of the barbell at every turn.




Summing Up
While we will never know who invented that very first barbell, the device’s history spans nearly two hundred years of lifting history. Innovation has come about thanks to the enthusiasm shown by circus athletes, bodybuilders, weightlifters and, more recently, strongmen. As a piece of equipment seen as absolutely necessary for the majority of gym goers, the barbell’s evolution was by no means straightforward or simple.




Necessity, finances and inspiration were needed to bring us the modern barbell. For lifters in 2019, we’re reaping the benefits.
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funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1604 on: May 23, 2021, 01:19:12 PM »
     
     
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IroNat

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1605 on: May 23, 2021, 01:19:27 PM »
Liked the one about Bob Hoffmann.  Guy was bananas.

Bananas are just about pure carbs/sugar.  Muscles run on glycogen so eating a banana fuels the muscles.

IroNat

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1606 on: May 23, 2021, 01:21:15 PM »
Rogue's elephant bar allows more weight to be lifted because flexes so much.

Turns a deadlift into a rack pull more or less.

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1607 on: May 23, 2021, 01:36:51 PM »
     
     


How do you feel knowing that Trump is still the most powerful person in America?

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1608 on: May 23, 2021, 01:40:49 PM »
How do you feel knowing that Trump is still the most powerful person in America?
      WHO INVENTED THE EZ BAR?
July 27, 2017 Conor Heffernan Resources, Training 5 comments
ezbar-comparison
A piece of equipment so commonplace on the gym floor that we often take its very existence for granted. That, at least, is my impression of the E-Z Bar. Having previously discussed the history of barbells, the ancient origins of the dumbbell and even the Swiss Ball for God’s sake, it’s somewhat shameful that the E-Z Bar’s history has been neglected. Especially after it helped me to rehab my elbows following an overzealous few months doing triceps extensions with a straight barbell (Not the smartest in hindsight).

So who do we credit for the EZ Bar and when exactly did this handy piece of equipment come into being?


The Origins of the EZ Bar

17862504_151202870216312 6_4863751513216342712_n
Photo courtesy of Ironhistory.com. See here.

Unlike the aforementioned dumbbells and barbells, whose first creator will remain anonymous it seems until the end of time, the man responsible for the EZ bar is remarkably easier to track down. In one of the more morbid searches I’ve done in recent years, I can tell you that Lewis Dymeck, an American lifter born in Arizona, was the man responsible for the EZ bar so popular amongst lifers.

Why morbid I sense you asking?

Well Louis had a relatively small online footprint, meaning that aside from trawling through old lifting mags from the 1950s, which PhD permitting I hope to do in the coming months, the best information I’ve gotten on today’s inventor comes from his death notice and obituary… So yes… morbid.

UNCEM_1469150831147.JPG
Courtesy of Findsgrave.com… A resource I never thought I’d need for this blog.

But it’s not all bad as aside from the above, I did come across a Daily Courier article written in honour of today’s inventor. Interviewing Lewis’ friends and family, we get a pretty cool insight into both the man and the inventor. Although I’m not sure about the FBI stuff! If you’ll indulge me I’d like to quote some of the piece:

In addition to patenting exercise equipment at their childhood home in Williamsport, Pa., Lewis Dymeck had Q clearance – pretty much “top secret” stuff – to work with the nascent Atomic Energy Commission; he was the first engineer at Hughes Aircraft Co. to get his own patent funding; and the FBI called him for consultant work….

Dennis Dymeck remembers his father working metal in shorter and shorter bent bars until settling on and selling the 48-inch, 1-and-1-16th diameter bar back in Pennsylvania.

“I remember him working on the bars, making them shorter and shorter. Then he’d bend the metal and go get them nickel-plated,” said Dennis Dymeck, whose father got him involved with weightlifting at a young age. “And he packaged them up in the kitchen, the ones he sold. It was a one-man show.”

Now in any case, Lewis’s invention came to light in the late 1940s and early 1950s when he obtained the first patent for the EZ Bar. Quite luckily for us, the original patent is still available online (here).

So why did he bother?

A common question faced by many people with an idea is why should I care? Why bother? And more often than not, who cares?

Well for Lewis, this bar would help solve a common problem across the gym floor. It would help lifters’ keep their form, and one imagines their body parts, in check. Going through the patent’s information we read that

As therefore proposed, the straight bar bell device is one that is used for the standard exercises to effect the development of the arms and biceps. In these exercises, the instructions are always the same and recite that the exercisemust be done with strength of arms alone, while keeping the elbows close to the user’s sides, without swinging the body.

However, very few persons can do such exercises correctly, since it is not natural or comfortable to do such exercise with a straight bar bell.

It has been found that by providing the bar of the bar bell with a pair of tortuous portions in proper spaced relation intermediate its ends so as to form hand grips, a bar bell is produced which overcomes the disadvantages of the conventional straight bar bell.

Accordingly, an object of this invention is to provide a bar bell for exercising purposes which will permit the exercises to be done correctly without body movement or strain.

Another object of the invention is to provide a bar bell which is simple in construction, rugged in design and highly eflicient in action.

So for once the gym bros’ cheat curling for biceps came to some good eh? Lewis’ invention was primarily catered to those for whom strict technique was an afterthought. The resultant bar was as follows

US2508567-0.png
Expanding the EZ Empire

So Lewis Dymeck got his patent in 1950… then what? What steps were taken to promote it amongst the general public? Given the industry at the time, Lewis’ decisions following his patent were to prove pivotal.

Within months of gaining his patent Lewis uprooted and moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico. Once there, he entered into business with Andy Jackson of the Jackson Barbell Company. Though Lewis had been advertising his bar since the patent, his partnership with Jackson promised a greater ease of production, distribution and marketing.

Thus from 1952 to 1954, one finds a series of advertisements for the rather technical sounding Dymeck/Jackson Curl Bar. For reasons I haven’t been able to understand just yet, the bar was rebranded from 1954 to 1964 when it became the Jackson Curl Bar.

In 1964, Jackson sold the rights to the Muscle Mogul Bob Hoffman, who began to produce and distribute the product under the name EZ Curl Bar. Though Lewis and Andy were the forerunners of this product, it is Hoffman one suspects who helped popularise the device and also the new name.

$_1.JPG
Indeed within a decade of Hoffman’s acquisition, the EZ bar had become a favourite of both competitive bodybuilders and the lay public. A position it seems to have held ever since.

Nevertheless if you ever stumble across an EZ bar with the initials ‘LD’ etched inside, you’ll know the meaning!

As always…Happy Lifting!

P.S. Given our love of being lifting hipsters, here are some great but rarely seen EZ Bar Exercises for Biceps, Triceps and the Chest.

Spider Curls


The French Press


EZ Pullover


F

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1609 on: May 23, 2021, 01:46:41 PM »
      WHO INVENTED THE EZ BAR?
July 27, 2017 Conor Heffernan Resources, Training 5 comments
ezbar-comparison
A piece of equipment so commonplace on the gym floor that we often take its very existence for granted. That, at least, is my impression of the E-Z Bar. Having previously discussed the history of barbells, the ancient origins of the dumbbell and even the Swiss Ball for God’s sake, it’s somewhat shameful that the E-Z Bar’s history has been neglected. Especially after it helped me to rehab my elbows following an overzealous few months doing triceps extensions with a straight barbell (Not the smartest in hindsight).

So who do we credit for the EZ Bar and when exactly did this handy piece of equipment come into being?


The Origins of the EZ Bar

17862504_151202870216312 6_4863751513216342712_n
Photo courtesy of Ironhistory.com. See here.

Unlike the aforementioned dumbbells and barbells, whose first creator will remain anonymous it seems until the end of time, the man responsible for the EZ bar is remarkably easier to track down. In one of the more morbid searches I’ve done in recent years, I can tell you that Lewis Dymeck, an American lifter born in Arizona, was the man responsible for the EZ bar so popular amongst lifers.

Why morbid I sense you asking?

Well Louis had a relatively small online footprint, meaning that aside from trawling through old lifting mags from the 1950s, which PhD permitting I hope to do in the coming months, the best information I’ve gotten on today’s inventor comes from his death notice and obituary… So yes… morbid.

UNCEM_1469150831147.JPG
Courtesy of Findsgrave.com… A resource I never thought I’d need for this blog.

But it’s not all bad as aside from the above, I did come across a Daily Courier article written in honour of today’s inventor. Interviewing Lewis’ friends and family, we get a pretty cool insight into both the man and the inventor. Although I’m not sure about the FBI stuff! If you’ll indulge me I’d like to quote some of the piece:

In addition to patenting exercise equipment at their childhood home in Williamsport, Pa., Lewis Dymeck had Q clearance – pretty much “top secret” stuff – to work with the nascent Atomic Energy Commission; he was the first engineer at Hughes Aircraft Co. to get his own patent funding; and the FBI called him for consultant work….

Dennis Dymeck remembers his father working metal in shorter and shorter bent bars until settling on and selling the 48-inch, 1-and-1-16th diameter bar back in Pennsylvania.

“I remember him working on the bars, making them shorter and shorter. Then he’d bend the metal and go get them nickel-plated,” said Dennis Dymeck, whose father got him involved with weightlifting at a young age. “And he packaged them up in the kitchen, the ones he sold. It was a one-man show.”

Now in any case, Lewis’s invention came to light in the late 1940s and early 1950s when he obtained the first patent for the EZ Bar. Quite luckily for us, the original patent is still available online (here).

So why did he bother?

A common question faced by many people with an idea is why should I care? Why bother? And more often than not, who cares?

Well for Lewis, this bar would help solve a common problem across the gym floor. It would help lifters’ keep their form, and one imagines their body parts, in check. Going through the patent’s information we read that

As therefore proposed, the straight bar bell device is one that is used for the standard exercises to effect the development of the arms and biceps. In these exercises, the instructions are always the same and recite that the exercisemust be done with strength of arms alone, while keeping the elbows close to the user’s sides, without swinging the body.

However, very few persons can do such exercises correctly, since it is not natural or comfortable to do such exercise with a straight bar bell.

It has been found that by providing the bar of the bar bell with a pair of tortuous portions in proper spaced relation intermediate its ends so as to form hand grips, a bar bell is produced which overcomes the disadvantages of the conventional straight bar bell.

Accordingly, an object of this invention is to provide a bar bell for exercising purposes which will permit the exercises to be done correctly without body movement or strain.

Another object of the invention is to provide a bar bell which is simple in construction, rugged in design and highly eflicient in action.

So for once the gym bros’ cheat curling for biceps came to some good eh? Lewis’ invention was primarily catered to those for whom strict technique was an afterthought. The resultant bar was as follows

US2508567-0.png
Expanding the EZ Empire

So Lewis Dymeck got his patent in 1950… then what? What steps were taken to promote it amongst the general public? Given the industry at the time, Lewis’ decisions following his patent were to prove pivotal.

Within months of gaining his patent Lewis uprooted and moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico. Once there, he entered into business with Andy Jackson of the Jackson Barbell Company. Though Lewis had been advertising his bar since the patent, his partnership with Jackson promised a greater ease of production, distribution and marketing.

Thus from 1952 to 1954, one finds a series of advertisements for the rather technical sounding Dymeck/Jackson Curl Bar. For reasons I haven’t been able to understand just yet, the bar was rebranded from 1954 to 1964 when it became the Jackson Curl Bar.

In 1964, Jackson sold the rights to the Muscle Mogul Bob Hoffman, who began to produce and distribute the product under the name EZ Curl Bar. Though Lewis and Andy were the forerunners of this product, it is Hoffman one suspects who helped popularise the device and also the new name.

$_1.JPG
Indeed within a decade of Hoffman’s acquisition, the EZ bar had become a favourite of both competitive bodybuilders and the lay public. A position it seems to have held ever since.

Nevertheless if you ever stumble across an EZ bar with the initials ‘LD’ etched inside, you’ll know the meaning!

As always…Happy Lifting!

P.S. Given our love of being lifting hipsters, here are some great but rarely seen EZ Bar Exercises for Biceps, Triceps and the Chest.

Spider Curls


The French Press


EZ Pullover
           
&t=70s
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funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1610 on: May 23, 2021, 01:49:56 PM »
&t=115s
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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1611 on: May 23, 2021, 01:51:23 PM »
F

chaos

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1612 on: May 23, 2021, 02:20:17 PM »

Title should read "Bitem touts rigging election to overthrow the government and liberals celebrate their idiocy"
Liar!!!!Filt!!!!

Primemuscle

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1613 on: May 23, 2021, 02:53:58 PM »
Title should read "Bitem touts rigging election to overthrow the government and liberals celebrate their idiocy"

Do you and Coach ever get together for a cup of coffee or a protein drink, a chat about politics and a lot of patting one another on the back?  :)

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1614 on: May 23, 2021, 03:05:12 PM »
Biden touts kids play with his hairy legs, while sniffing the panties of his daughter and her friends while watching romper-room and not quite getting it..

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1615 on: May 23, 2021, 03:23:44 PM »
How do you feel knowing that Trump is still the most powerful person in America?

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CUUOF9NaqPo

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1616 on: May 23, 2021, 06:01:45 PM »
Do you and Coach ever get together for a cup of coffee or a protein drink, a chat about politics and a lot of patting one another on the back?  :)

Yes... and we plot

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1617 on: May 23, 2021, 06:02:43 PM »
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CUUOF9NaqPo

How do you feel knowing Trump is still the most powerful person in the country?

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1618 on: May 23, 2021, 06:14:04 PM »
The Connection Between Banana and Bodybuilding
 FITNESS TIPS LOVERS 2:22:00 PM

 



If you are a gym buff, then you have probably heard that you should eat a banana before and after your work out. Yes, it’s true! A banana is a very important food for body builders and most of them do eat banana before and after their gym session. But what’s in the fruit? Is it because of its protein content? Protein is very essential in building muscles because it helps in muscular repair after an intense workout. Or is it because of the potassium? We all know that banana is very rich in potassium. Well, to know the truth, let’s see how much protein and potassium the banana contains.


 



The facts:

......... Bananas are good source of potassium. 400 grams of potassium is actually 10 percent of the recommended potassium intake daily for the average man.




STUPID old funk, 400 grams of potassium would kill anyone  :o ,  regarding to YOU  : 4 kg (4000 grams) of potassium is recommended  :o.




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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1619 on: May 23, 2021, 06:18:51 PM »
Interesting half of a story. To get the full picture you'd need to know how many COVID deaths there were during Trump's last 4 months in office. My guess is Breitbart doesn't want people to make that comparison because it would take the thunder out of their claim.

Based on the graph below it appears during the 4 months prior to January 20, 2021 the number of deaths is about equal to the number of deaths afterwards.

Thanks for that NY Times graph lol

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1620 on: May 23, 2021, 06:26:13 PM »
Yes... and we plot

That's just as I suspected.  :)

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1621 on: May 23, 2021, 06:35:31 PM »
Thanks for that NY Times graph lol

You are welcome. You are also welcome to post a graph from one of your sources. It might be interesting to see the contrast....if in fact there is one.

What I know is that some of the Oregon  COVID restrictions have been relaxed just this week. I went to the liquor store yesterday and the sign saying masks required was gone. In its place was a sign which read if you are fully vaccinated, masks are not required. I guess the clerk must be fully vaccinated because she and I were both mask free....yippee! No more fogged up glasses and mumble mouthed conversations.

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1622 on: May 23, 2021, 06:48:02 PM »
Yes... and we plot

Is that like swapping spit?

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #1623 on: May 23, 2021, 07:57:41 PM »
You are welcome. You are also welcome to post a graph from one of your sources. It might be interesting to see the contrast....if in fact there is one.

What I know is that some of the Oregon  COVID restrictions have been relaxed just this week. I went to the liquor store yesterday and the sign saying masks required was gone. In its place was a sign which read if you are fully vaccinated, masks are not required. I guess the clerk must be fully vaccinated because she and I were both mask free....yippee! No more fogged up glasses and mumble mouthed conversations.

That’s good. Apparently there’s no Chinavirus among the local terrorists there....only applies to law abiding citizens who don’t what their shit burned down

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