Using advanced thermal imaging technology, researchers were mapping muscle activation patterns during compound lifts. What they found shocked everyone involved: traditional grip solutions weren't just failing to solve the real problem—they were actively making it worse.
"When we measured muscle activation with straps, we saw a 15-20% reduction in neural feedback," explains Dr. James Morton, who led the study. "Gloves were even worse. And chalk? It was just masking the underlying issue."
The problem wasn't grip strength at all. It was grip connection.