Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry Strength Standards Calculator
Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry standards have Novice starts at 0.38x bodyweight for men and 0.26x for women, while Elite starts at 0.98x for men and 0.70x for women over the fixed 20 meters test.
The calculator uses dumbbell load divided by bodyweight, so a valid result is tied to the same course length, implement position, start, finish, and load-entry rule every time; enter only the external load named by the label "Dumbbell load", not bodyweight plus the implement and not a nearby carry variation.
Use the calculator result, current range, load/bodyweight ratio, and next target load to compare repeated 20 meters attempts under the same setup and surface rules, especially when the next target is only a small load gap away.
Understanding Your Score
Your Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry score is based on the heaviest valid dumbbell load you can carry for the full 20 meters course. The calculator does not reward a faster run, a shorter pickup, or a partial finish. It uses one number: load divided by bodyweight, after both values are normalized to the same unit.
Dumbbell load means the one implement carried for this exact test. If the single kettlebell or dumbbell is 32 kg, enter 32 kg. Do not enter bodyweight plus the implement, a paired-implement total, or a different carry position. This load-entry convention matters because the standards are built around the external load the lifter carried across the fixed-distance course, not a different implement, not a different grip position, and not a max-distance effort.
The tier result is lower-inclusive. If the men’s Advanced boundary is 0.76x bodyweight, a 200 lb man reaches Advanced at exactly 152 lb. If the result is one pound under that target at the same bodyweight, it stays in the lower tier. The calculator also shows the next target load so the result becomes a concrete number, not just a label.
| Result field | What it means on this page | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Dumbbell load | The entered external load for the exact Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry test. | Prevents wrong implement, per-hand, or bodyweight-inclusive entries from changing the score. |
| Fixed distance | Exactly 20 meters for every scored attempt. | A heavier shorter attempt and a lighter full-course carry are different tests. |
| Load/bodyweight ratio | Dumbbell load divided by bodyweight. | Lets lifters compare relative carrying strength without using absolute load alone. |
| Tier | The highest sex-specific threshold your ratio reaches. | Shows where the result sits inside this standards model. |
| Current range | The ratio band between your current tier and the next tier. | Explains whether you barely reached the tier or are close to the next one. |
| Next target | The load needed for the next lower-inclusive threshold at your bodyweight. | Turns the next tier into a specific loading target in pounds or kilograms. |
Example: a 200 lb male carrying 112 lb in the Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry scores about 0.56x bodyweight. That clears the men’s Intermediate boundary but not the Advanced boundary of 0.76x. His next Advanced target is 152 lb, so the remaining load gap is 40 lb.
Example: a 150 lb female carrying 60 lb scores about 0.40x bodyweight. That clears the women’s Intermediate boundary but not the Advanced boundary of 0.55x. Her next Advanced target is 83 lb, so the remaining load gap is 23 lb.
Standards Tables
These Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry standards are for one valid 20 meters carry using dumbbell load. The ratio table is the scoring model. The target-load tables translate those ratios into practical loading numbers at common bodyweights. The calculator still uses your exact entry, so use the tables as a readable map and the calculator as the exact result.
Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry Ratio Standards – 20 meters, Dumbbell load
| Sex | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch benchmark |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Below 0.38x | 0.38x | 0.56x | 0.76x | 0.98x | 1.15x |
| Women | Below 0.26x | 0.26x | 0.40x | 0.55x | 0.70x | 0.84x |
Men – Target Dumbbell load Examples in Pounds
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 140 lb | 53 lb | 78 lb | 106 lb | 137 lb | 161 lb |
| 160 lb | 61 lb | 90 lb | 122 lb | 157 lb | 184 lb |
| 180 lb | 68 lb | 101 lb | 137 lb | 176 lb | 207 lb |
| 200 lb | 76 lb | 112 lb | 152 lb | 196 lb | 230 lb |
| 220 lb | 84 lb | 123 lb | 167 lb | 216 lb | 253 lb |
| 240 lb | 91 lb | 134 lb | 182 lb | 235 lb | 276 lb |
| 260 lb | 99 lb | 146 lb | 198 lb | 255 lb | 299 lb |
Women – Target Dumbbell load Examples in Pounds
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 110 lb | 29 lb | 44 lb | 61 lb | 77 lb | 92 lb |
| 125 lb | 33 lb | 50 lb | 69 lb | 88 lb | 105 lb |
| 140 lb | 36 lb | 56 lb | 77 lb | 98 lb | 118 lb |
| 155 lb | 40 lb | 62 lb | 85 lb | 109 lb | 130 lb |
| 170 lb | 44 lb | 68 lb | 94 lb | 119 lb | 143 lb |
| 185 lb | 48 lb | 74 lb | 102 lb | 130 lb | 155 lb |
| 200 lb | 52 lb | 80 lb | 110 lb | 140 lb | 168 lb |
Metric Target Dumbbell load Examples
| Sex | Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 70 kg | 27 kg | 39 kg | 53 kg | 69 kg | 81 kg |
| Men | 80 kg | 30 kg | 45 kg | 61 kg | 78 kg | 92 kg |
| Men | 90 kg | 34 kg | 50 kg | 68 kg | 88 kg | 103 kg |
| Women | 55 kg | 14 kg | 22 kg | 30 kg | 39 kg | 46 kg |
| Women | 65 kg | 17 kg | 26 kg | 36 kg | 46 kg | 55 kg |
| Women | 75 kg | 20 kg | 30 kg | 41 kg | 53 kg | 63 kg |
The standards are not a claim that every surface, lane, and implement setup is identical. They are a consistent calculator standard. For comparisons, keep the same load accounting, same 20 meters distance, same lane or surface, and same attempt rules.
Elite Strength Levels
Elite Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry strength means the lifter can carry a high external load for the full fixed distance without changing the test. The important part is not just the number entered. It is the number entered under the same load-entry rule, start rule, finish rule, implement position, surface, and no-restart rule.
| Sex | Elite begins at | What that means | Common bodyweight example | Elite target | Stretch target |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 0.98x bodyweight | Heavy controlled 20 meters carry with dumbbell load well above the listed lower tiers. | 200 lb | 196 lb | 230 lb |
| Men | 0.98x bodyweight | Same ratio, different absolute load because bodyweight changed. | 90 kg | 88 kg | 103 kg |
| Women | 0.70x bodyweight | High relative loaded-distance performance across the full course. | 150 lb | 105 lb | 126 lb |
| Women | 0.70x bodyweight | Same ratio shown in metric units. | 65 kg | 46 kg | 55 kg |
A result near Elite should be audited more strictly, not less. The heavier the implement gets, the easier it is for the scored attempt to drift into a shorter course, a drop-and-restart, a supported stop, a medley-style shortcut, or a different implement. If any of those happen, the number may still be a useful training note, but it is not the same 20 meters Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry standards result.
The stretch benchmark is included as a high-end reference inside the calculator model. It is not a separate tier and it does not change the Elite boundary. Use it when an Elite result is already established and the lifter wants a stricter internal target.
Milestones
Milestones make the standards useful between tiers. Because this calculator is ratio-based, the next meaningful target is not the same absolute load for every lifter. It is the next lower-inclusive ratio multiplied by your bodyweight, shown as dumbbell load.
| Current result | Next men’s target | Next women’s target | What the target represents | What to record before retesting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 0.38x | 0.26x | First listed standards boundary for a valid 20 meters carry. | Implement, exact load entry, course length, surface, and whether the carry stayed continuous. |
| Novice | 0.56x | 0.40x | Moves the result beyond basic completion into a stronger relative carry. | Footwear, lane, turn/no-turn convention, and whether the same load-entry rule was used. |
| Intermediate | 0.76x | 0.55x | Marks a substantially heavier controlled load for the same course. | Whether the implement stayed in the required position and no outside support was used. |
| Advanced | 0.98x | 0.70x | Reaches the Elite threshold for this fixed-distance standards model. | Notes confirming the attempt did not become a shorter pickup or reset carry. |
| Elite | 1.15x | 0.84x | Uses the stretch benchmark as the next internal target after Elite. | All setup variables, because small rule changes can create large load differences at this level. |
Next-target examples
| Example lifter | Current entry | Current tier | Next target | Remaining load gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, 200 lb | 112 lb | Intermediate | 152 lb for Advanced | 40 lb |
| Female, 150 lb | 60 lb | Intermediate | 83 lb for Advanced | 23 lb |
| Male, 90 kg | 68 kg | Advanced | 88 kg for Elite | 20 kg |
| Female, 65 kg | 36 kg | Advanced | 46 kg for Elite | 10 kg |
Use milestones as standards checkpoints, not as a separate scoring model. If a retest changes the lane, surface, implement, load accounting, or finish standard, write that down and avoid treating the result as a direct comparison.
How The Calculator Works
The calculator collects sex, bodyweight, bodyweight unit, exercise, load, and load unit. It displays the fixed distance as context and does not ask for a user-entered distance. It converts bodyweight and load into a common unit, divides load by bodyweight, applies the lower-inclusive sex-specific tier boundaries, then calculates the next target load from the next ratio boundary.
| Input or result | Calculator treatment | Displayed meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | Selects the male or female threshold table. | Controls which tier boundaries are used. |
| Bodyweight | Converted with the selected bodyweight unit. | Used only as the denominator for load/bodyweight ratio and next target math. |
| Dumbbell load | Converted with the selected load unit. | Preserved as the primary entered result value. |
| Exercise | Locked to Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry. | Prevents adjacent loaded carries from sharing the same score. |
| Fixed distance | 20 meters, read as non-scoring context. | Confirms the attempt is the same fixed-distance test. |
| Tier and range | Highest lower-inclusive threshold reached. | Shows current tier, current range, next target, and load gap. |
Boundary handling matters. A ratio exactly equal to a threshold qualifies for that tier. A just-below-boundary mixed-unit case stays below the tier even if a rounded two-decimal display would look close. The runtime uses the shared ratio display helper for reader-facing ratio text so near-boundary results do not imply a higher tier.
Testing Rules
Testing rules keep the standards comparable. The valid test is single-arm dumbbell suitcase carry over a fixed 20-meter course with one dumbbell held at the side in one hand. Start with the implement under control at the measured start line, carry through the full 20 meters lane or course, and finish when both lifter and implement satisfy the finish rule. Keep the same lane, surface, footwear, implement, and load-entry convention for any repeated result.
| Setup item | Required rule | What to record |
|---|---|---|
| Course | Measured 20 meters distance. | Lane length, surface, turn/no-turn setup, and start/finish marks. |
| Implement | Dumbbell load entered under the spec convention. | Exact implement, total external load, and whether the same setup is reused. |
| Start | one dumbbell is held at the side in one hand, the lifter stands tall without external support, and the implement begins at the measured start line under control | Whether the lifter began under control at the measured start. |
| Finish | lifter and dumbbell cross the full 20-meter finish under control without switching hands, putting the dumbbell down, or receiving assistance | Whether the full distance was crossed under the required position standard. |
| Attempt detail | Counts? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Full 20 meters carry, same implement, same load meaning, controlled finish | Valid attempt | Matches the fixed-distance standards model. |
| Shortened course or unclear finish line | Invalid | Distance changed, so the load/bodyweight result is not the same test. |
| Drop, outside assistance, supported stop, restart after failure, or major position loss | Invalid | The attempt no longer represents one continuous valid carry. |
| Wrong implement, wrong side/hand convention, wrong position, or wrong load entry | Invalid | The result belongs to another tool or should be logged separately. |
What counts is the heaviest valid external load for this exact Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry. What does not count includes shortening the lane, changing the surface to make the load easier, using the wrong implement, resting after a failed movement, or entering a load that contradicts the Dumbbell load label.
Related Tools
Related tools are useful only when their boundaries are clear. The Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry standard should stay specific to its own implement, carrying position, fixed distance, and load-entry rule. Use related tools to map neighboring strength qualities, not to replace this score with a different test.
| Related tool | Why it is related | How it differs |
|---|---|---|
| Yoke Walk | Fixed-distance carry with heavy external load and strict start/finish rules. | Uses total yoke load and a yoke frame rather than dumbbell load. |
| Trap Bar Farmer Walk | Another loaded carry where grip, posture, and lane consistency shape the result. | Uses a trap bar and total trap-bar load, not this implement or position. |
| Sandbag Carry | Shares fixed-distance load/bodyweight scoring and continuous-carry validity rules. | Uses sandbag load and front-body carrying mechanics. |
| Sled Push | Uses a fixed course and load/bodyweight standards for external loading. | The implement is pushed on a surface instead of carried by the body. |
| Sled Drag | Tests loaded-distance lower-body drive under a measured course standard. | Uses dragging mechanics and added sled load instead of a hand-carried implement. |
| Kettlebell Rack Carry | Nearby carry family with rack-position demands and clear load accounting. | Single-implement rack loading differs from this exact test when the selected tool is not that carry. |
If a related tool uses the same distance, it still may not use the same load interpretation. That is why the calculator names the exercise, the fixed distance, and the load label together. Those three details keep the page from becoming a generic loaded-carry comparison.
For manual QA, verify that every related-tool link stays secondary to this Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry calculator. The related section should help users choose the correct neighboring fixed-distance tool when the implement or position changes, while this page remains the authority for dumbbell load over 20 meters. That distinction protects the standards table, the load/bodyweight ratio, and the next-target math from being read as a generic carry scale.
Frequently Asked Questions
What load should I enter?
Enter dumbbell load for the exact Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry attempt. Dumbbell load means the one implement carried for this exact test. If the single kettlebell or dumbbell is 32 kg, enter 32 kg. Do not enter bodyweight plus the implement, a paired-implement total, or a different carry position.
Is the distance always 20 meters?
Yes. The fixed-distance display label is 20 meters. Shorter, longer, max-distance, shuttle, or medley attempts should not be scored as this standards result unless they preserve the same 20 meters test convention.
Does bodyweight count as load?
No. Bodyweight is used only to calculate the load/bodyweight ratio and next target load. The entered load is the external load named by the page label.
Can I compare pounds and kilograms?
Yes. The calculator converts load and bodyweight units consistently before calculating the ratio. For repeated tests, keep the implement, surface, and distance the same even when units change.
What makes an attempt invalid?
An attempt is invalid when the course is shortened, the finish is unclear, the implement is dropped and restarted, outside assistance is used, the required position is lost, or the load entry uses the wrong convention.
Why do tiers use load/bodyweight ratio?
The ratio lets lifters of different sizes compare relative loaded-distance performance. Absolute load still appears as the primary entered value and as the next target load.
What does the next target mean?
The next target is the next lower-inclusive ratio threshold multiplied by your bodyweight, then shown in your selected load unit. It is the concrete load needed to reach the next tier or stretch benchmark.
Can I use a different implement if it feels similar?
No. Similar loaded carries can be useful, but they are different standards tools. Use this page only for Single Arm Dumbbell Suitcase Carry, and use the related tool that matches the other implement or position.
How should I retest?
Retest on the same measured course with the same implement type, same lane or surface, same load-entry convention, and the same start and finish rules. That makes changes in tier, range, and load gap meaningful.