Blog

Practical strength guides tied to real tools

Every article on this site is meant to answer a practical training or nutrition-tracking question and then point you toward the calculator, benchmark, or method that helps you act on it immediately.

Articles

Current article collection

The guide library focuses on standards, 1RM estimation, deadlift and squat expectations, relative-strength scoring, high-protein foods, and practical food tracking.

high protein low calorie foods

The Complete High-Protein, Low-Calorie Foods List

Compare high-protein, low-calorie foods by protein, calories, protein efficiency score, carbs, fat, category, and satiety.

19 min read2026-05-18

how to calculate calories in homemade food

How to Calculate Calories in Homemade Food

Learn the raw-weight method for homemade meal calories, avoid hidden oil and sauce errors, and portion recipes by finished weight.

16 min read2026-05-18

bench press standards by weight

What Is a Good Bench Press for My Weight?

Use bodyweight-based benchmarks to see whether your bench press is beginner, intermediate, advanced, or elite.

8 min read2026-03-23

how to calculate 1rm

How to Calculate Your One Rep Max

Learn how to estimate your 1RM from reps, why formulas differ, and how to use the result for real training.

7 min read2026-03-23

strength standards

Strength Standards: Are You Beginner or Elite?

Understand what beginner, novice, intermediate, advanced, and elite really mean across the main barbell lifts.

9 min read2026-03-23

wilks calculator

Wilks Score vs DOTS Score: Which Is Better?

Compare Wilks and DOTS, understand the difference in scoring logic, and know when each metric is useful.

7 min read2026-03-23

squat strength standards

How Much Should I Be Able to Squat?

Use bodyweight-based squat standards to figure out what counts as solid, strong, and advanced.

8 min read2026-03-23

deadlift strength standards

How Much Should I Be Able to Deadlift?

Use bodyweight-based deadlift standards to see what counts as novice, intermediate, advanced, and elite pulling strength.

8 min read2026-03-24

1rm formula

The 5 Best Formulas to Estimate 1RM

Compare common 1RM formulas, understand what each one does well, and pick the right one for your training.

8 min read2026-03-23

What these articles are for

The blog exists to make the calculators easier to use, not to duplicate them. When a lifter asks a question such as what counts as a good bench press, whether Wilks or DOTS is more useful, or how to estimate a one-rep max from reps, the answer usually needs both explanation and a tool. The articles handle the explanation. The calculators handle the output.

That division matters because raw numbers without context are not very helpful. A page about deadlift expectations should explain how bodyweight, age, and equipment change the interpretation. A page about a 1RM formula should explain where the estimate gets noisy and how to turn it into a training max instead of pretending the formula is infallible. The best educational pages on a calculator site reduce confusion before a user ever touches an input.

In practice, that means every article is written to do one of three jobs: clarify a concept, set a practical benchmark, or help the reader choose the right tool on the site. If the page does not help someone make a better training decision, it does not belong here.

How to use the library

Start with the article that matches the question you already have, then move into the relevant calculator. If you are trying to understand your bench press level, read the benchmark guide and then open the bench calculator. If you want to compare relative-strength systems, read the scoring comparison and then test both the Wilks and DOTS pages with the same numbers.

The blog is also where the site can be more explicit about limits. Some pages explain why percentiles are modeled instead of pulled from a live leaderboard. Others explain why training maxes should stay conservative or why rep-based 1RM estimates become less reliable as reps climb. Those clarifications are useful because they stop the calculators from feeling like black-box widgets.

If you prefer to browse by tool rather than by article, use the calculator hub first and treat the blog as supporting material. The goal is not to force extra reading. The goal is to make sure the explanation is there when you need it.

Editorial Approach

Articles are written to stay close to the site's actual calculator behavior. When a benchmark is modeled rather than sourced from a live third-party dataset, the supporting article should say so. When an estimate depends on one formula out of several possible formulas, the article should explain the tradeoff instead of quietly pretending there is one perfect answer. The aim is plain-language coaching utility, not filler copy.

That approach also helps the site age better. If a formula, assumption, or standards model changes, the surrounding explanation can be updated alongside the tool rather than leaving the reader with a stale article and a separate tool that no longer matches it. For a site built around calculators, consistency between content and output is part of quality.