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Galileo Research Facts No. 108: Can Galileo Training improve jump height?

Galileo Research Facts No. 108: Can Galileo Training improve jump height?

This study investigated the effects of Galileo Training on jumping height in young male and females (age 20-30). Over a period of a little more than 5 months a progressive intensive training was performed (26Hz, position 3, 3-5 minutes, deep squat, 10 repetitions per minute, 2 session per week, extra loads of up to 75% of body weight).

The control groups received either no exercise (control) or progressive intensive conventional strength raining (conventional). Even though the Galileo Group received only about 50% of the exercise time of the conventional group they showed about double the training effect of 17% increase in jump height. It is therefor in line with various other Galileo studies focusing on variations of jumping (#GRFS135, #GRFS77, #GRFS60, #GRFS38, #GRFS35, #GRFS10).

One of the interesting points about the study is the type of training control used for this study: instead of defining fixed increases of intensity at certain points in time, the training goal was to exhaust the muscle within 3 to 5 minutes. Depending of the individual performance and improvement the training weights were adjusted on a session-to-session base (if the exercise did not lead to exhaustion within 3 minutes the weight was increased for the next session). This allowed for an individual adaptation of training intensity which helps to improve exercise effects.

#GRFS108 #GalileoTraining #Vibrationtraining #JumpHeight #Workout #CMJ #MechanoStimulation