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Push-Pull Workout Timer

Four upper-body stations — push-ups, inverted rows, pike push-ups, and a superman hold — visited in rotation for four rounds at 40 seconds of work to 20 seconds of rest, with a minute’s breather between rounds. Warmup to cooldown, the session runs 19:40.

Alternating push and pull is the engine: while your chest and shoulders work, your back recovers, and vice versa, so each station gets fresher muscle than straight sets would allow. The rows need something to hang under — a sturdy table does the job — and if you have nothing at all, open the editor and substitute a pulling movement you can do.

Workout Presets

More Bodyweight Workouts Presets

Good to Know

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do the push-pull stations take?
19:40 end to end. Four full rotations through the four stations at 0:40 work and 0:20 rest, plus the round breaks, warmup, and cooldown.
What can I use for inverted rows at home?
The underside of a sturdy table is the classic answer; a low bar or rings work if you have them. If nothing is safe to hang under, swap that station in the editor — keep some kind of pull, or the session turns all push.
Why rotate the stations instead of finishing each one?
Rotation lets your pushing muscles recover during the row and the hold, so you arrive at every station fresher. If you’d rather exhaust one movement at a time, the Push-Up Density preset is built exactly that way.