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Best Fitness Inventions Health & Fitness Trends Inertia Wave

13 Sep 2021
  • Peloton Bike
  • MYX Fitness.
  • SoulCycle At-Home Bike.
  • NordicTrack Commercial 2950 Treadmill. ...
  • FightCamp. ...
  • Inertia Wave…
  • NordicTrack RW900. ...
  • Tempo Studio.

ABOVE are some great inventions. The Inertia Wave can, and will give you a core and cardio challenge greater, or equal to any invention listed above! We stand behind our research. READ MORE...

Inertia Wave Workout That’ll Challenge You Like No Other!

Are you ready to try a better battle rope workout that will challenge you like no other battle rope workout has done before?  Well get ready because there is something new that has just been released that is university proven to work out better than the battle ropes, it is called the Inertia Wave

Today, we are talking about something new in the realm of Battle Ropes. It’s a new invention invented by a guy by the name of Dave Parise, and the product is called the Inertia Wave™️ There’s a patent on it.

The Inertia Wave is becoming really popular.  Whoever buys it, loves it because it gives a better than battle rope workout they have ever experienced.  But the thing is a lot of people are still using the Battle Ropes, and they want to know.  “Why is this better? How do I use it?”

The Battle Rope vs. The Inertia Wave

When you talk about the Battle Ropes versus the Inertia Wave, it’s not an easy explanation because the Battle Rope is basically extreme muscle torque and tension on the wrist and shoulder joints where the Inertia Wave is smooth.  It’s rhythmic.  It’s coordinated movements.  The benefits of the Inertia Wave®️ are that it benefits your entire body and strengthens your core.

The Battle Ropes, on the other hand, has very limited benefits.  It engages the anterior muscles and creates poor posture.  All the studies show that.

Before the Inertia Wave®️ came out, we only had Battle Ropes.  We didn’t know any better. We didn’t know that we were just doing an anaerobic bout.  Battle Ropes are no different than strength training.  It’s 100% anaerobic.  What does it do?  It puts a lot of stress and strain on the wrists, rounds out the shoulders or protracts the shoulders,  rounds up the thoracic spine, makes you look down.  Watch somebody doing what’s called a continuous wave.  They always kind of have dropped their chin and look down and round up their back.  Wherever the head goes, the body follows.  I say to myself, “Why are we doing these exercises that are hurting us?”  The Battle Ropes are heavy.  They’re bulky.  They are expensive.  They clutter up your workspace.  The Inertia Wave ®️on the other hand has 30 ways to anchor, and you can work out anywhere at any time.   It weighs less than 2.7 pounds, and it’s only about nine feet versus the Battle Ropes which is about 50 feet.  People don’t realize that.

The Battle Ropes are usually 50 feet and then, you double them up.  You put them around an anchor point. The problem with putting around the anchor point is that all the energy goes into the floor.  It’s not really safe.  They’re not a way to enhance cognitive or athletic abilities at all.  It frees and unwinds. The plastic-dipped ends fall off.  I know somebody out there is laughing at that because it’s always the plastic-dipped ends that fall off. 

The Inertia Wave Works Better Than The Battle

The Inertia Wave works on impedance match.  It’s far superior to the Battle Ropes.  This is all done by MIT researchers, Southern Connecticut State University Metabolic Labs, and Penn State.   All the energy like water or electrical charges goes through the tubes, builds up in the tubes, hits the anchor point comes back into the body.

The Battle Rope, as you start this type of battle rope workout, you’re sending all the energy into the anchor point.  So whatever it is you’re wrapping it around, whatever the anchor point is; all the energy is going into the anchor point.

Think about it.  Did you ever do a battle rope workout and wrap a Battle Rope around an anchor point and whenever you wrapped it around, it starts to shake and rattle?  That’s proof right there.  That’s basically my dissertation on the difference between the two.

Making A Better Battle Rope Workout

The inventor of the Inertia Wave wanted to come up with something that would burn more calories and have much more engagement on the entire muscle system as well as the inner and outer muscles, core muscle and superficial muscles.  He had to come up with something that was more intense than a Battle Rope Workout.  He ended up doing it with all these metabolic laboratory tests.

One engineer said using the Inertia Wave ®️was like double under jump ropes with the upper body.  I thought that was a cool statement.  He just said, “Listen, man. You never do double ropes?”  I said, “Yeah, I’m not really that coordinated.  I could jump rope but double unders are a little tough for me.”  He goes, “That’s what the Inertia Wave ®️ is.”  He goes, “You’re getting the same benefits of double under jump rope with the upper body.”  And that’s cool for some people especially if you have knee problems, hip problems, ankle problems and you can’t jump.

Battle Rope (Inertia Wave) Workout For Beginners

The number one advice is when you receive the product, watch the video links sent to your inbox, in a thank you confirmation letter.

There are video links that come when you purchase the product, directly to your email.  The video links, one is labeled “Anchor Videos, Beginner Videos, Advanced Videos, STRONG workout Videos.

 My first advice, is to watch the videotapes. It’s a training wheel, step-by-step, hold your hand dissertation on...“Hold the ropes this way or the tubes this way.  Walk back...Get into this posture...Start to shake or oscillate the tubes... Listen to the wind sound.  It tells you to step by step what to do. You can even drop a tube, and use a single tube to adapt to the Wave Patterns. 

7 Methods of Use (Battle Rope Workout)

The following is a description of how to use the Inertia Wave ®️ and go through a simulation of a battle rope workout.  We do this for specific reasons because we want to engage different muscles in the body, whether you’re training all your back muscles or you’re engaging quadriceps or abdomen.  There are all different patterns that the tubes are going through, and they’re kind of pulling your body in a direction but you’re trying to engage and anti-direct your body.  There are always different movement patterns that are very beneficial, that strengthen the entire body, every muscle in the body.

How to Use the Inertia Wave

The first thing I would recommend is basically watching the videos.  And then from there, practice just like anything else.  Practicing perfectly makes perfect practice.  However they say it, you have to practice the Inertia Wave, hear the wind, go into the next method, and just take it to step by step.  I would also say that if you have an exercise program that you’re doing, let’s say you are typically using a strength training program where you’re training certain body parts in the gym in regards to hypertrophy because the goal is to build muscles or massive hypertrophy, whatever it is or maybe you’re just conditioning like an athlete, you don’t want what they call muscle-bound.  You want to stay pliable.  You want to stay flexible. I would just recommend using it as part of your conditioning program.

You might do a 30-second bout of the Inertia Wave and do a strength training exercise or a couple of sets of strength training.  You might grab the Inertia Wave and do that, it's what’s called active rest. Basically, instead of standing there and socializing with your buddies and sipping your water, you’re basically grabbing the Inertia Wave during the rest period and then catching your breath, and going back into the strength training.  That’s also part of high-intensity interval training.  Any way you slice it, you have to learn the Wave Patterns specific to the model. Please take your time before you do it because it is extremely intense.

Let’s say you’re doing 30 seconds Crossfire.  When you learn that the method Crossfire or the positioning of the body when you’re doing Crossfire, you might do that for 30 seconds.  You might catch your breath.  You might do it another 30 seconds. You might catch your breath.  You can make it part of that conditioning program.  Maybe you’re doing it for 12 minutes.  That’s metabolic conditioning.  Maybe you’re doing 30 seconds of the Crossfire and then you put it down and you go into a plank, turn around, you do some sit-up type movements, some bridging type movements, squats, step back lunges.  It’s just something to add to your current workout or make it a workout itself.  As a workout itself, you want to go as hard as you can, as fast as you can, for as long as you can, and then, rest, and then do it all over again. The ultimate goal is to go through all 18 methods.

Here is my basic recommendation:

Four times a week, 12 minutes a day, would be the maximum !!! I would have anybody do the Inertia Wave if you were going to use the Inertia Wave and the Inertia Wave only, with nothing.  That is how extreme the Inertia Wave is. 

Learn more at Inertiawave.com 

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