Alf Veedersane wrote: » People drop dumbbells on purpose and not. Surely it's less risky to not flute about in the wrong area where you're at risk of being hit by a dumbbell that shouldn't have been dropped? Saying DBs shouldn't be dropped down beside the bench is well and good but it happens in every gym more often than not.
2nd Row Donkey wrote: » ^^^ is she hot? I bet she's hot.
bluewolf wrote: » Oh my god rerack your weights
StereoSound wrote: » Young ones looking for attention, no interest at all in the gym. Same 2 girls in my gym chatting and laughing like it's a night club. All dressed up in their gym gear and doing nothing.
kumate_champ07 wrote: » theres a difference between dropping a weight to satisfy the ego from the loud noise and possible attention from people looking over at you, and dropping a weight because your body has been completely drained. the latter is perfectly acceptable and is why you dont use clips on a barbell when doing bench-press, so you can dump the weights if you get in trouble and have no spotter
EagererBeaver wrote: » It's pretty simple - if she's doing anything on the floor, don't start pressing anything in her airspace. I'd find it hard to believe she'll squeeze in and start doing sit ups on her mat underneath you in the middle of your set
kumate_champ07 wrote: » ... why you dont use clips on a barbell when doing bench-press, so you can dump the weights if you get in trouble and have no spotter
Nicolas Cage wrote: » I don't agree with this. Wouldn't the roll of shame be safer? Sore, but safer.
EagererBeaver wrote: » Any instructor I've ever come across has always advised not using clips on such lifts. In my opinion, anyone who would is an idiot. Good luck doing the roll of shame when you fail just before lock-out and you drop 100kg onto your sternum.
Nicolas Cage wrote: » How are you going to drop that onto your sternum? Unless something catastrophic such as your elbow dislocating or something occurs (in which case, you have worse to worry about), surely lowering it back to your chest is a far easier thing to achieve?
Blacktie. wrote: » You think a dislocated elbow is worse than 100kg free falling to your chest :eek:
Nicolas Cage wrote: » I've failed without spotters/safeties only a handful of times in my life. First time ever, I had no idea how to handle a failed bench. As the bar was resting on my chest, I tried to hail mary it up onto the pins. It caught the pin on one side, but bar fell on other side, plates fell off and bar almost went flying. That to me seems the most likely way of somebody getting injured.
Nicolas Cage wrote: » you're kinda screwed if you have a bar on your chest and only one of your arms works.
Nicolas Cage wrote: » How are you going to drop that onto your sternum?
dastardly00 wrote: » In changing rooms, it annoys me when people don't put a lock on the locker they are currently using... When I come in and I'm looking for an empty locker, it can take ages to find an actual empty locker! Loads of unlocked ones, but with peoples' gear in them. Then when those with unlocked lockers come back from their session, they often can't remember where their stuff is and have to ask people to move here, there and everywhere. Well if they had a lock the would be able to identify it.... Rant over
Blacktie. wrote: » You should start moving everyones stuff around. Bonus points if you swap 2 people with the same bags.
Mellor wrote: » Start stealing their stuff and they'll soon start bringing locks.
leggo wrote: » Put different people’s stuff in different bags. Really **** **** up.
D3V!L wrote: » I just take the stuff out and put it in another less desirable locker, like one of the lower ones on the other side of the changing room :pac:
dastardly00 wrote: » I'd prefer not to be touching other people's stuff and gear bags... think of all those germs! :eek: :pac: