
Ring Resistance Band Assisted Single Arm Pull-up
- Músculo objetivo
- —
- Equipamiento
- Resistance Band
- Parte del cuerpo
- Back
- Tipo
- Strength
The Ring Resistance Band Assisted Single Arm Pull-up uses a resistance band looped through a gymnastic ring to reduce the load on the working arm, making the single-arm pulling pattern accessible at an earlier stage of development. It trains the lats, biceps, and rear shoulder on the working side while demanding continuous core and scapular stability to resist rotation throughout the movement.
Cómo hacer el Ring Resistance Band Assisted Single Arm Pull-up
- 1Set the rings at a height that gives you a complete dead hang with feet clear of the floor. Loop a resistance band through the ring on your working side so it forms a secure foot or knee loop hanging below.
- 2Grip the ring with your working hand, palm facing toward you or in a neutral position. Step one foot or knee into the band loop, then lower yourself into a dead hang, letting the band bear a portion of your bodyweight.
- 3Before pulling, pack the shoulder on your working arm — actively depress and retract the scapula so the shoulder joint is stable rather than elevated and loose.
- 4Brace your core and hold a hollow-body position: ribs down, abs engaged, free leg long or crossed behind the banded leg to minimise swing.
- 5Drive your elbow forcefully down and back toward your hip, keeping the ring close to your torso rather than letting it drift outward.
- 6Pull continuously until your chin clears the height of the ring on the working side, maintaining as upright a torso as you can throughout.
- 7Lower yourself under full control back to a dead hang, resisting gravity the entire way down rather than dropping, to maximise lat and bicep engagement on the eccentric.
- 8Complete all planned reps, then switch sides, matching the band setup and rep count.
Consejos de técnica
- Choose a band that challenges you near the end of each set but still allows clean form throughout — if you are rotating or kipping to finish reps, move to a heavier band.
- Pack the shoulder before every rep, not just the first one. Re-depressing and retracting the scapula at the bottom of each rep protects the shoulder joint and creates a stronger start position.
- Keep the ring path close to your body during the pull; allowing the ring to drift outward shortens your effective range of motion and places the shoulder in a mechanically weaker position.
- Control the lowering phase on every rep — slow, resisted descents develop the eccentric strength that will carry you toward unassisted reps faster than any other approach.
- Progressively move to lighter bands over time: treat each band as a step on a ladder, and only move down once you can hit your target reps with controlled form and a full descent.
Errores comunes
- Using a band that provides too much assistance and performing the movement without true muscular effort — this builds a false sense of progress without developing the lat strength needed for an unassisted rep.
- Failing to pack the shoulder before pulling, which allows the scapula to elevate and places the shoulder joint in an impingement-prone position at the start of every rep.
- Letting the torso rotate excessively toward the working side during the pull — this compensates for insufficient pulling strength and shifts load away from the back muscles.
- Dropping out of the bottom of the rep instead of resisting the descent, which wastes the eccentric portion of the movement and significantly slows strength development.
- Driving the elbow outward rather than down and back toward the hip, which reduces lat recruitment and places a disproportionate share of the load on the biceps and rear deltoid.
Preguntas frecuentes
How do I set up the resistance band for this exercise?
Loop the band through the ring so it forms a secure foot or knee loop hanging below the ring. The loop should sit low enough that you can step into it before gripping and lowering into a dead hang. Before applying load, pull the band to confirm it is fully seated in the ring and will not slip.
What muscles does this exercise work?
The lat on the working side is the primary mover. The biceps, rear deltoid, and middle trapezius assist the pull. The core and hip flexors work throughout the movement to resist rotation and keep the body stable.
What band tension should I start with?
Start with enough tension that you can complete 5–8 clean reps per arm with controlled form and a full descent on every rep. If you need to rotate or kip to finish reps, use a heavier band. If the final reps feel easy, move to a lighter one.
How is this different from a band-assisted pull-up on a fixed bar?
The rings rotate freely and move in space, requiring constant stabilisation at the wrist, forearm, and shoulder that a fixed bar does not demand. Even with the same band assistance, the ring version is more challenging in terms of joint stability and anti-rotation control.
When am I ready to remove the band?
A reliable benchmark is 5 controlled full-range reps per arm with the lightest band you own — no kipping, no excessive torso rotation, and a resisted descent on every rep. From there, practice unassisted eccentric-only reps (jumping or stepping to the top position and lowering yourself slowly) as the bridge to full unassisted reps.
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