Seated Shoulder Press; Lateral Shoulder Raise - Nautilus NS4000 Owner's Manual

Weight machine
Hide thumbs Also See for NS4000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

SEATED SHOULDER PRESS

Muscles worked: This exercise emphasizes
the front shoulder muscles (anterior deltoid,
a portion of the middle deltoid) and the
triceps, which are located on the back of the
upper arm.
Starting position:
• In the seated position, grasp the handles,
and bend your elbows until your hands are
near your chest. Rotate your upper arms
away from your torso so that your elbows
are pointing outward to each side and your
palms are facing down.
• Adjust the seat back tilt forward to the fifth or
sixth incline position depending on our
comfort level
• Hands are positioned just outside of your
upper chest, with palms facing together
and wrists straight.
Motion:
• Slowly move your elbows outward,
simultaneously bending your arms so that
your forearms remain parallel to each other
and the hands remain over the elbows
throughout the movement.

LATERAL SHOULDER RAISE

Muscles worked: This exercise emphasizes the
side shoulder muscles (middle deltoids), the
top muscles of the rotator cuff (supraspinatus)
and the upper trapezius muscles.
Starting position:
• Stand facing perpendicular to the low pulley
station, grasp the handle with your farthest
hand, palm facing the machine.
• Place your opposite hand on your hip
• Feet should be spaced shoulder width
Motion:
• Raise your arm so that it is level with the
floor, do not go beyond this range.
• Keep your elbow slightly bend during the
movement.
• Slowly lower your arm to the starting
position without relaxing or resting the
weight.
Key points:
• Do not twist your trunk during this
movement.
• Do not bend your elbow during the exercise.
• If you are unable to reach a full range of
motion, lower the weight.
Shoulder Exercises
— Shoulder Abduction (and elbow extension)
• Stop when your upper arms are
approximately straight out to the sides (your
elbows will be level with your shoulders or
very slightly below).
Key points:
• Limit and control the range of motion so
that your elbows travel only slightly behind
your shoulders — if at all.
• For normal pressing/pushing patterns of
movement you may choose to allow the
shoulder blades to "float" forward and
backward naturally with the arm movement,
or for increased pec involvement you may
keep the shoulder blades "pinched" together
throughout both the upward and downward
movements.
— Shoulder Abduction (and elbow extension)
START
FINISH
START
FINISH
FINISH
13

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents