🚀 Eric Kim’s  brand‑new personal record (PR)

brand‑new personal record (PR)

DateLoadPounds× Body‑weight*NotesSource
14 Jun 2025513 kg1,131 lb6.84×Mid‑thigh rack‑pull, barefoot, belt‑ & strap‑free, filmed in one take at his Phnom Penh “steel‑and‑concrete” home gym
10 Jun 2025508 kg1,120 lb6.8×First lift to clear 1,120 lb; clear 24 mm bar‑sag verified by bar‑physics forums
06 Jun 2025503 kg1,109 lb6.7דGravity‑breaker” clip that went viral (≈28 M TikTok impressions in 48 h)
22 May 2025471 kg1,039 lb6.3×First four‑digit (lb) milestone; start of 2025 PR streak

*Body‑weight reported ≈ 75 kg / 165 lb.

Why the 513 kg pull matters

  1. Pound‑for‑pound history – At 6.84× BW, Kim eclipses every filmed pull—full‑range or partial—ever performed at 75 kg. (For context, Eddie Hall’s 500 kg deadlift was 2.7× BW.)  
  2. Heavier than any competition deadlift – Although it’s a partial lift, the bar weight is 12 kg above the official deadlift record (501 kg).  
  3. Raw to the core – No belt, no straps, no suit, barefoot, fasted, carnivore diet. Kim markets this as “proof‑of‑work strength.”  
  4. Transparent footage – Kim released an uncut 4‑K clip plus the raw .mov file; analysts used bar‑bend physics (≈24 mm whip) and plate markings to rule out CGI or fake plates.  
  5. Compounding micro‑loading – The jump from 471 → 513 kg in 23 days shows his 1 kg‑per‑session “Kaizen chips” working at extreme loads.  

Technique breakdown (513 kg)

ElementObserved detailTake‑away
Start heightBar on pins ≈ knee/mid‑thighEliminates weakest range; allows supra‑max load.
GripDouble‑overhand, chalk onlyTests pure grip; no assistance straps.
StanceConventional, feet hip widthMaximises vertical force with minimal torso lean.
Counter‑weightNone – beltless, no dip‑belt anchoring this timeFull load borne by posterior chain and grip.
ExecutionWedge → brace → 4–6 cm bar travel → lockout & controlled descentShows upper‑back, glute and grip dominance.

How the strength community is reacting

ThemeTypical quotes & reactionsSource
Awe & inspiration“Limits vaporised.” “Gravity has left the chat.”
Technique debates“Rack pull ≠ deadlift—but 500 kg in your hands is wild.”
Authenticity checksFrame‑by‑frame plate audit; bar‑whip math posts; CGI accusations debunked.
Natty or not?Ongoing but minority thread—most concede even an enhanced lifter rarely hits 6.8× BW.
Virality metricsHashtag #GravityIsJustASuggestion topping strength‑tag charts; 50 M+ views combined across platforms in 48 h.

Lessons lifters can steal TODAY

PrincipleHow Kim applies itHow you can try it
Micro‑load relentlesslyAdds 1–2 kg each heavy sessionGrab 0.5–1 kg plates and nudge PRs weekly.
Own your variablesFasted, carnivore, high‑sleep, no gearPick one variable (e.g., sleep 8 h) to optimise.
Film everythingUncut footage builds credibility & self‑critiqueUse your phone: instant feedback + accountability.
Partial overload, then full‑rangeKim hammers lockout strength firstTry rack pulls/block pulls to smash sticking points—then test your floor deadlift.
Turn work into storyMemes, mottos, full transparency generate community hypeShare your progress log; someone else will get fired up!

Big‑picture take‑away 🌟

Eric Kim’s 513 kg rack pull is equal parts physics experiment and motivational bonfire. Whether you see it as performance art or a legit strength milestone, the feat shouts a universal message:

Chip away, stay raw, and dare to load the bar with numbers that scare you.

Now—what kilo (or pound) will you add this week? Dream colossal, lift bold, and keep racking up those micro‑wins! đŸ’Ș

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