Anonymous wrote:
If you have the grip strength, you can also do suitcase squats holding the dumbbells. That's 120 lbs so it's a pretty good squat weight.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. The main reason I don't do squats is because I do NOT have a squat rack. Therefore, I can't do front squats either. I do not use the Smith Machine for anything, but it's there as an option. I use a bar to do my deadlifts, rows, shoulder presses. My "gym" is just a little weight room in the basement of my office building. No personal trainers. So I'm just looking for the BEST replacement out of what I have available...leg press machine, dumbbells up to 60lbs, and a Smith machine. Sorry if I was confusing.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. The main reason I don't do squats is because I do NOT have a squat rack. Therefore, I can't do front squats either. I do not use the Smith Machine for anything, but it's there as an option. I use a bar to do my deadlifts, rows, shoulder presses. My "gym" is just a little weight room in the basement of my office building. No personal trainers. So I'm just looking for the BEST replacement out of what I have available...leg press machine, dumbbells up to 60lbs, and a Smith machine. Sorry if I was confusing.
Anonymous wrote:Does your gym offer personal training sessions? If so, it probably would hurt to pay for a one hour consult on how best to do squats and other leg strengthening with what is available at your gym.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can do deadlifts safely you can do squats safely. Start with low weight, sets of 10 reps, and work on the movement and only go up in weight slowly.
You have a Smith machine at home?
Don't use machines for the big leg lifts - they don't work any of the smaller or stabilizing muscles because they force you into a single movement path. Better to do weighted lunges with dumbbells. You could also do dumbbell cleans but they're not the same as squats.
I don't have anything at home. I have a decent fitness center where I work that has a leg press and Smith Machine. No squat rack and actually I get to the gym so early that I'm always the only one there, so I have no one to spot me. As a matter of fact, I don't even bench press. They have a machine where you sit and push out. As to your other comments...yes, I totally understand that machine exercises don't work the stabilizing muscles, but I didn't know if weighted lunges were still better than the machine exercises. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:If you can do deadlifts safely you can do squats safely. Start with low weight, sets of 10 reps, and work on the movement and only go up in weight slowly.
You have a Smith machine at home?
Don't use machines for the big leg lifts - they don't work any of the smaller or stabilizing muscles because they force you into a single movement path. Better to do weighted lunges with dumbbells. You could also do dumbbell cleans but they're not the same as squats.