A gym client may want to track upper-body pulling strength more objectively. A field sport athlete may need pulling strength monitoring as part of a broader strength programme. A client progressing toward chin-ups or pull-ups may use the lat pulldown as a controlled machine-based assessment.
The Lat Pulldown Repetition Maximum Test provides a controlled way to assess vertical pulling strength using a standardised machine setup, grip and ROM. Rather than requiring a true 1RM attempt, the test can be performed using a submaximal repetition maximum, such as a 3RM, 5RM, 8RM or 10RM. The load and reps are then entered into Measurz to calculate the estimated 1RM.
The result is useful for strength tracking, but it should not be interpreted as a complete measure of back function, shoulder health, grip capacity, pull-up ability, injury risk or sport readiness.
The Lat Pulldown Repetition Maximum Test measures the heaviest load a client can pull for a defined number of repetitions using a lat pulldown machine or cable setup.
Depending on the protocol, this may be a 3RM, 5RM, 8RM, 10RM or another repetition maximum. The repetition target should be clearly recorded.
The test may be performed using:
Wide-grip lat pulldown
Neutral-grip lat pulldown
Close-grip lat pulldown
Single-handle lat pulldown
Machine lat pulldown
Cable lat pulldown
Other standardised vertical pulling setup
In Measurz, the professional records the load and completed repetitions. Measurz then calculates the estimated 1RM from that result. This estimated 1RM can be used to monitor progress over time and guide loading decisions.
If the client performs a true single-repetition maximum, the result should be labelled as a directly measured 1RM. If the result is calculated from a submaximal load and repetitions, it should be labelled as an estimated 1RM.
This test is used to assess vertical pulling strength and track upper-body strength changes over time.
It may be useful for gym clients, athletes, general fitness clients and upper-body strength programmes where lat pulldown strength is a meaningful monitoring variable.
It is especially useful when the professional wants a strength estimate without requiring a true maximal 1RM attempt. A submaximal RM test can be more practical for many clients while still giving a useful estimated 1RM through Measurz.
The test measures lat pulldown performance under the selected setup.
It may reflect:
Vertical pulling strength
Lat pulldown performance
Upper-back and arm pulling contribution
Grip and handle tolerance
Control through the selected ROM
Pain or symptom response
Estimated 1RM progress across training blocks
Training load progression
It does not measure complete back function, isolated latissimus dorsi strength, shoulder health, grip strength, pull-up ability, sport performance or injury risk on its own.
This test may be useful for gym clients, athletes, general fitness clients, upper-limb strength clients and anyone completing pulling-strength training.
It may not be appropriate when shoulder, elbow, wrist or grip symptoms increase during pulling, the client cannot maintain a repeatable pulling technique, the test cannot be performed through a consistent ROM, or the client is not ready for maximal or near-maximal repetition testing.
Lat pulldown machine or cable machine
Selected attachment such as wide bar, neutral grip, close grip or single handles
Load stack or plates depending on machine
Adjustable thigh pad or seat
Measurz for recording load, reps and estimated 1RM
Optional metronome
Optional video
Choose the lat pulldown setup
Decide whether the test will use wide grip, neutral grip, close grip, single handle, machine pulldown or another clearly defined vertical pulling setup.
Record the setup
Record machine type, attachment, grip width, grip type, seat height, thigh pad position, torso angle, ROM, tempo and load method.
Choose the repetition target
Select the repetition maximum target, such as 3RM, 5RM, 8RM or 10RM. Use the same target for retesting where possible.
Define valid ROM
Set a clear start and finish range. A valid repetition should use the same pulling range each time without excessive trunk lean, jerking, shoulder discomfort, shortened ROM or uncontrolled return.
Warm up
Complete light warm-up sets. Increase load gradually before testing.
Perform the test
Ask the client to complete the selected repetition maximum with controlled movement and the defined ROM.
Stop the attempt
Stop when the client reaches the target reps, cannot complete another valid rep, loses ROM, uses unacceptable compensation, reports limiting symptoms or cannot maintain control.
Record the maximum successful set
The score is the heaviest load completed for the target repetition range with acceptable technique and ROM.
Enter load and reps into Measurz
Record the completed load and repetitions in Measurz. Measurz calculates the estimated 1RM from the entered result.
Record the load, reps and exact lat pulldown setup. Measurz uses the completed load and reps to calculate the estimated 1RM.
The estimated 1RM should be interpreted as an estimate, not the same as a directly tested 1RM. If a true 1RM was performed, label it as directly measured. If the result comes from a submaximal load and repetitions, label it as estimated.
Interpretation should include:
Absolute load
Completed repetitions
Estimated 1RM
ROM
Machine setup
Grip and attachment
Tempo
RPE
Pain or symptoms
Compensations
Previous baseline
A lower estimated 1RM may suggest reduced lat pulldown performance under the tested setup, but it does not identify the cause. Pain, fatigue, shoulder position, grip, machine setup, torso angle, confidence, recent training and technique may all influence the result.
No universal normative value should be applied across lat pulldown machines and populations. Lat pulldown results vary by machine design, attachment, grip width, grip type, torso angle, ROM, tempo, body size, training history and whether the 1RM is directly measured or estimated.
Use baseline comparison and progress across sessions as the primary benchmarks.
If a single-arm version is tested, side-to-side comparison can be useful, but it should not be treated as a strict pass/fail rule. A noticeable difference between sides should be interpreted alongside symptoms, grip strength, shoulder function, training history and related upper-limb strength findings.
Machine-based lat pulldown scores should not be compared across different machines or attachments unless the setup is carefully matched.
Common errors include changing grip width, changing attachment, using inconsistent ROM, leaning back excessively, jerking the start, using momentum, failing to control the return, shrugging, changing tempo, testing while fatigued, not recording symptoms and comparing results across different machines or grip setups.
A common recording error is failing to distinguish between a directly measured 1RM and an estimated 1RM. When load and reps are entered into Measurz, the result should be described as an estimated 1RM unless a true 1RM was directly tested.
The main limitation is that the test measures lat pulldown performance only. It does not fully assess shoulder function, back function, grip strength, pull-up capacity, sport performance or injury risk.
Use this test to monitor upper-body pulling strength, guide training loads and track response to strength training programmes.
The estimated 1RM can help track progress across training blocks, adjust loading and compare results across retests when the same setup is repeated.
It is most useful when interpreted alongside seated row, pull-up or chin-up performance, grip strength, shoulder strength, upper-limb symptoms and movement quality.
Record protocol type, machine type, attachment, grip width, grip type, seat height, thigh pad position, torso angle, ROM, tempo, load, reps, RM target, estimated 1RM, RPE, pain score, symptom location, compensation notes, reason for stopping and retest date.
Useful notes include shortened ROM, excessive trunk lean, jerking, shoulder shrugging, grip limitation, pain-limited stop, tempo failure, fatigue-limited attempt or setup change.
The key Measurz workflow is:
Enter the completed load
Enter the completed reps
Review the estimated 1RM calculated by Measurz
Record machine setup, grip, ROM, symptoms, RPE and compensations
Use the same protocol for retesting
It measures loaded vertical pulling strength under the selected lat pulldown setup.
The professional enters the completed load and reps into Measurz. Measurz uses this information to calculate the estimated 1RM.
Not unless the client completed a true 1RM. If the result is based on load and multiple repetitions, it should be labelled as an estimated 1RM.
No. A lat pulldown is machine-based and externally loaded, while a pull-up uses bodyweight and different stability demands.
Only cautiously. Wide grip, neutral grip, close grip and single-handle setups can all change the score.
Yes. Pain score, symptom location, grip limitation, ROM and whether symptoms limited the result should be recorded.
No. A 3RM, 5RM, 8RM or 10RM may be more appropriate for many clients. Measurz can use load and reps to estimate 1RM.
The Lat Pulldown Repetition Maximum Test measures machine-based vertical pulling strength.
Measurz calculates the estimated 1RM from the recorded load and reps.
Machine setup, attachment, grip and ROM must be repeated for meaningful retesting.
Do not treat an estimated 1RM as the same as a directly measured 1RM.
Do not treat the result as a complete shoulder, back or pulling profile.
Record load, reps, setup, grip, ROM, symptoms and RPE in Measurz.
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