by UnwashedMolasses » Mon Sep 29, 2014 5:36 pm
It depends on a bunch of things. I'm assuming when you refer to "weight machines" you mean the type of pulley-based often seated machines found in gyms instead of, say, a barbell. People who train on those can get huge, but yes, they do often have difficulties, particularly because the stabilizer muscles (the bitty muscles that support/work with the bigger ones) are often ignored in isolation exercises. As far as if they can be more powerful or strong, I've no idea - you'd need some kind of universally applicable metric for strength or power, and I couldn't tell you if one exists. As far as the claims of the bodyweight dudes - for some reason people in every area of fitness like to talk shit about every other area, e.g. cardio bunny, meathead, chestbro, functionaljerk. There's very little in the way of evidence-based discussion though. Anecdotally speaking I can say the biggest/strongest/leanest/most acrobatic people I've met have always trained in several different ways rather than pigeonholing themselves to one.