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JORack pulls feel productive because the load is high and the effort feels extreme… but from a hypertrophy standpoint, the problem isn’t the intensity, it’s the inefficiency.
When a movement spreads tension across multiple muscles without taking any of them through their full contractile range, you spend a lot of fatigue for very little adaptation.
That’s the part most lifters miss. The issue isn’t whether rack pulls are “bad,” it’s that they create a huge recovery cost without giving you targeted stimulus on the tissues you’re actually trying to grow. In a well-designed training system, that trade-off rarely makes sense.
Hinges like RDLs or stiff-legs give you the opposite profile… long-range loading, predictable setup, stable mechanics, and fatigue that actually drives posterior chain development instead of draining resources you need for the rest of the week.
If you want to understand why certain movements outperform others, and how to choose exercises based on resistance profiles, tissue bias, and fatigue cost, comment “AHO” and I’ll send you the details for our Applied Hypertrophy Optimization course.
What’s the hinge that’s carried your posterior chain the furthest?
@johnjewett3










