Choosing a Hand Gripper

1. Why get Captains of Crush Grippers?
Captains of Crush (CoC) Grippers are the gold standard for building and testing grip strength—and the single most important grip strength tool you can choose. Precise, durable, competition-grade grippers worthy of serious strength athletes, CoC Grippers are ready to produce the quickest gains in grip strength and hand health.
CoC Grippers work together as a family. The strength ratings assigned to CoC Grippers are backed by premium materials and precision manufacturing so you know that each Trainer, for example, is spot on its rating—and each No. 1, for example, exactly that much more difficult.
2. Which CoC Gripper should I start with?
Here is a quick overview; if you have any questions and would like more guidance, please don’t hesitate to contact IronMind.
- If you are a beginner, a senior or a rehab patient, the Guide might be perfect for you.
- If you are active, but have not been training your grip and your job does not involve hand strength, then the Sport is the most likely place to start.
- If you have been doing serious overall strength training, but have not specifically trained your grip, start with the Trainer.
- If you use the strength of your hands in your job or if you have been training on sporting-goods-store-type hand grippers, start with the No. 1.
Just to keep this in perspective, most people who lift weights cannot close a No. 1 Captains of Crush Gripper the first time they try and only rarely do we ever see someone close a No. 2 Captains of Crush Gripper on his first attempt.
Training with Captains of Crush Grippers
3. How should I train with CoC Grippers?
You can start with one CoC Gripper, especially if you’re on a budget. Be sure to warm up with a lighter gripper or by squeezing a rubber ball or an IronMind EGG.
However, if grip strength is your goal, you’ll want to have three different grippers to work with:
- Warm-up gripper: do 1 or 2 fairly easy sets of 10 to 12 reps; these prepare you physically and mentally
- Working gripper: using a gripper that you can do 5 to 10 reps with, this is where you make progress; depending on your own level, do 1 to 3 sets of 5 to 7 reps to all-out failure
- Challenge gripper: this is the gripper you are trying to close next; after 6 weeks or so of consistent, progressive training with the working gripper, start doing partial reps, negatives, or holds for time with this gripper, and use a CoC Key to measure your progress, if you like
4. How many reps and sets should I do and how often should I train?
Captains of Crush Grippers come with training directions, but our basic philosophy is that low reps plus high effort are the way to build strength. In a nutshell, you might do something like 1 or 2 warm-up sets, followed by 2 or 3 maximum-effort sets of moderate-to-low reps, and do this workout 3 times per week.
To make the most of your workouts, make sure you:
- always warm up to prevent injuries
- avoid overtraining
- focus on quality effort, not quantity
- vary your training to keep your mind and body fresh
Remember that the low-intensity–high-volume traditional approach to training with grippers—doing endless easy reps—will do little to improve your grip and a lot to shorten the life of your gripper. Even though you don’t have to change your clothes or go to the gym to train with your hand gripper, we recommend that you take your training as seriously as if you were working on a big power clean, for example, so this is not something to do while you’re driving, sitting at your desk, or watching TV.
5. When should I move up from one level to the next on the Captains of Crush Grippers?
Most people have to be able to do 20 to 25 complete reps on one of our grippers before they can close the next level up. A good rule of thumb is when you can do 10 to 12 full, consecutive reps on one gripper, it is time to start working on the next level.
6. What should I do when I get stuck at one level?
The key principle is to add a new twist, so try varying your sets, reps, and number of training days, or attack your grip with another training tool. For example, you can do something as simple as training with your CoC Gripper held upside down (i.e., with the spring facing down rather than up), or including some negatives or strap holds along with your normal training. IMTUGs let you attack your fingers one or two at a time, while the IronMind EGG gives you a different approach to everything from active rest to maximum efforts. If you can’t quite make it to the CoC No. 2, No. 3, or No. 4, give the CoC No. 1.5, No. 2.5, or No. 3.5 a try—it might be the stepping stone you need. Try using a plate-loaded grip machine, such as the Go-Really-Grip Machine.
Seek out good training information, starting with:
For a complete listing of the grip-related information we offer, please look at our All-About-It Resource Pages on Grip Training, Hand Grippers, and Hand Strength.
Finally, some people just plain overtrain on hand grippers, so sometimes a short break can work wonders for your progress.
Always remember that Captains of Crush Grippers warrant the same respect you’d have for a heavy barbell, so treat them the same way. Always warm up, don’t overtrain, focus on quality not quantity, and vary your training to help keep your mind and body fresh. Don’t approach your Captains of Crush Grippers any more casually or frequently than you would a barbell loaded to your PR deadlift.
7. How do I integrate my Captains of Crush Gripper training with my other grip work?
If making progress on Captains of Crush Grippers is your main goal, training on them and doing related work on your crushing grip should be your top priority.
Thus, do pinch gripping or any type of supporting and open-hand grip work after your crushing grip work or on a different day. It’s the same with forearm work: do it either following your CoC Gripper training or on a different day. Keep in mind the priority principle: do your most important training first and let everything else follow.
8. Can you explain strap holds, negatives, forced reps, and partials?
Strap holds, invented by John Brookfield, allow you to “add weight” to your gripper by attaching weight to a strap or belt; you then squeeze the end of the strap between the handles of the gripper, holding the handles shut for time or until failure. If you can’t keep the handles shut tight against the strap, the strap and weight will fall. By adding weight, you can make it tougher to hold the gripper closed. Our Close-the-Gap Straps were made specifically so that you can train with strap holds.
Negatives, first used to great advantage by Joe Kinney in his training to close the No. 4, are used to train on a gripper you can’t close. Close the gripper using an aid (e.g., your other hand, your leg) and then remove the aid and hold the gripper shut only with your training hand for as long as you can, fighting to keep it shut until it finally forces its way open.
Forced reps are just that, continuing to do reps by cheating the gripper closed, pressing with bodyweight, your non-training hand, your leg, etc. Partials are also just as they sound: doing reps by closing the gripper part way if you cannot fully close the gripper. You are moving from a fully open to a partially closed position; or from a partially
Partials are also just as they sound: doing reps by closing the gripper part way if you cannot fully close the gripper. You are moving from a fully open to a partially closed position; or from a partially closed to a fully closed (or more fully closed) position. Incidentally, don’t confuse training on partials with doing deep-set closes as demonstrations or tests of strength. The former is perfectly legitimate and the latter is not.
These and other methods of training are included in the book Captains of Crush Grippers: What They Are and How to Close Them, Second Edition.