@jesusloverr thanks for answering!
I can do a tucked front lever, but I can’t do a tucker front lever pull with straight arms from a hanging position. Especially at the bottom it just feels impossible. Is this normal? Should I view the pull as starting from more of a 135° angle instead of starting at 180°? Or is this even too large a range of motion? I usually do them hanging from a high bar.
That brings me to my second question. Right now I have a low bar to my disposal where I could touch the ground as you do, but when I move to my new place I probably won’t. Do you reckon I just pick an angle for my arms to which I do those negatives and then go back up?
And then a question that has bugged me for longer. If I want to do FL rows but can only do a tucked FL, then how can I even do rows? Aren’t my knees in the way of the bar? Maybe I should do it on rings then?
I’ve heard that putting isometrics before doing straight arm and bend arm work isn’t as beneficial as the opposite way around, how true is that?
when you implemented the one legged front lever into the isometric training hold for 6-10s, is that including both legs or just one? i.e. holding left leg first and right leg tucked for 6-10s then switch