Block Pull To Deadlift Conversion Calculator
This Block Pull to Deadlift calculator estimates Deadlift strength from Block Pull performance.
Enter your sex, bodyweight, and Block Pull performance to see your Deadlift estimate, expected range, strength tier, and ratio to bodyweight.
The calculator uses the conversion model for this tool to translate Block Pull performance into the Deadlift estimate. Use the result as a planning estimate, not a guaranteed max or attempt recommendation.
What Your Block Pull Says About Your Deadlift
A strict Block Pull set can estimate the Deadlift strength you may express when the bar returns to the floor. The source usually uses more load because equal blocks shorten the range and remove the hardest floor-start portion.
For an 80 kg lifter, 180 kg for 5 strict reps produces a 210.0 kg source estimate and a 184.8 kg center Deadlift prediction, with a 163.8-205.8 kg range. The center is 2.310 times bodyweight and falls in the Intermediate target tier for a male lifter.
| Block Pull set | Source estimate | Center Deadlift | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 180 kg x 5 | 210.0 kg | 184.8 kg | 163.8-205.8 kg |
| 200 kg x 3 | 220.0 kg | 193.6 kg | 171.6-215.6 kg |
| 220 kg x 1 | 227.3 kg | 200.1 kg | 177.3-222.7 kg |
Use the range for planning, and trust a recent strict floor Deadlift set over the conversion.
How the Block Pull to Deadlift Conversion Works
The calculator estimates Block Pull 1RM by multiplying total barbell load in kilograms by one plus reps divided by 30. It then multiplies that source estimate by 0.88 for the center Deadlift prediction, with 0.78 and 0.98 forming the displayed range.
- Source estimate: load x (1 + reps / 30)
- Center: source x 0.88
- Range: source x 0.78 to source x 0.98
- Classification: unrounded center target only
The profile reflects the expected relationship between a below-knee reduced-range overload and a floor-start Deadlift. It is a planning model rather than a guaranteed transfer rule.
Sex changes target classification thresholds, not the transfer multipliers. Display units follow the entered load unit.
How Accurate Is This Block Pull Estimate?
The estimate is most useful when every source rep starts motionless from equal blocks at the same declared below-knee height. Bar, stance, grip, footwear, block surface, start position, and lockout must stay consistent across the set and across future comparisons.
The wide range acknowledges that block height can change the source dramatically. A low block keeps more of the floor pull, while a bar placed close to the knee can become a lockout-specialized overload with much less connection to starting strength.
| Evidence quality | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Measured repeatable block height | Best comparison input |
| Block height changed | Results are not comparable |
| Direct floor set available | Trust the direct result |
| Above-knee start | Outside this source standard |
Confirm the estimate through ordinary floor-pull training rather than a max attempt.
Why Block Pull Strength Does Not Match Floor Deadlift
A Block Pull begins with the bar elevated, so the lifter avoids the lowest part of the Deadlift and usually starts closer to a stronger position. A floor Deadlift requires creating tension, pushing through the floor, and maintaining position before reaching the range trained by the source.
The size of the gap depends on block height, bar flex, grip, stance, hip position, and how much the lifter specializes in lockout work. Two lifters with the same Block Pull can therefore have very different floor results.
| Difference | Effect |
|---|---|
| Below-knee block start | Shorter range and heavier load |
| Floor start | Tests initial force and position |
| Bar flex | Changes when the full load leaves the blocks |
| Floor-pull practice | Improves setup and early bar speed |
The calculator shows a broad range because these differences cannot be removed by one coefficient.
What Counts as a Strict Block Pull Input
Enter total straight-bar weight, including the bar and all plates. Place the bar motionless on equal stable blocks at a declared below-knee height. Use the same stance, grip, bar position, and setup for every rep, then pull to full lockout under control.
Count only reps that start motionless and preserve the full source-defined range. Do not bounce the bar from the blocks, hitch, shorten lockout, change block height, or accept help. Follow the source strap rule consistently.
- Do not enter a floor pull or above-knee lockout-only pull.
- Do not enter a rack-pin pull with different friction.
- Do not enter touch-and-go repetitions.
- Do not enter a per-side plate value.
If the blocks are unequal or move during the set, the result is not valid source input.
Block Pull Estimate vs Deadlift Standards
The displayed tier ranks only the predicted Deadlift center result for the entered sex and bodyweight. It does not rank the Block Pull source estimate. The source and target remain separate so an overload number is never treated as direct floor strength.
The runtime classifies the unrounded center prediction before display rounding. A shown value near a threshold can receive the correct tier even when kilograms are displayed to one decimal or pounds to a whole number.
| Output | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Source estimate | Rep-adjusted Block Pull strength |
| Center target | Primary floor Deadlift estimate |
| Range | Practical transfer window |
| Tier and ratio | Predicted target relative to bodyweight |
Use the direct Barbell Deadlift tool when an actual floor set is available.
How to Improve Floor Deadlift Transfer
Block Pulls can overload the upper range, but transfer improves when the blocks stay below the knee and the source preserves the target stance and bar path. Keep enough floor Deadlift practice to maintain tension, initial leg drive, and position through the range the blocks remove.
| Observed gap | Likely focus | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Block Pull rises, floor pull stalls | Starting strength | Practice controlled floor pulls |
| Bar drifts forward | Bar path | Keep the bar close |
| Lockout is strong, floor is slow | Source is too specialized | Lower the blocks or add floor work |
| Setup changes under load | Load too heavy | Reduce load and restore position |
The center prediction is not permission to attempt that weight. Build toward it through normal training.
When to Use This Block Pull Calculator
Use this calculator when you have a recent strict Block Pull set from a known below-knee height and want a floor Deadlift planning range. It can help compare training blocks or show whether stronger lockout work is likely to support the full lift.
| Use it when | Do not use it when |
|---|---|
| Block height is known and fixed | Block height changed |
| Total load is known | Only per-side plates are entered |
| Every rep starts motionless | The bar bounces or touches and goes |
| You want a planning range | You need an attempt recommendation |
Retest under the same setup for useful comparisons, and replace the estimate with direct floor performance when available.
Related Strength Tools
Use these five tools to classify the source, validate the target, and compare nearby Deadlift variations.
- Barbell Rack Pull Classify direct elevated-pull strength. Check a nearby source movement independently. This classifies an elevated pull instead of converting it to a floor Deadlift.
- Barbell Deadlift (Raw) Classify direct Deadlift strength. Validate the target prediction with actual performance. This starts on the floor rather than equal blocks.
- Barbell Pause Deadlift Classify Pause Deadlift strength. Compare another pull with added difficulty. This pauses during a full-range pull rather than shortening the range.
- Barbell Tempo Deadlift Classify Tempo Deadlift strength. Compare a controlled-speed Deadlift variation. This changes lifting speed rather than starting height.
- Barbell Sumo Deadlift Classify direct Barbell Sumo Deadlift strength. Compare the conversion with a second floor-start deadlift stance and loading pattern. The wide stance and more upright setup change the leg, hip, and back demands; it is a direct sumo test, not an estimate of conventional deadlift performance.
Each destination measures its named lift directly. Trust a valid floor Deadlift set over this conversion.
Block Pull to Deadlift FAQs
Do I enter the bar and all plates?
Yes. Enter total barbell weight.
How high should the blocks be?
Use the declared below-knee height and keep it identical across tests.
Can I use rack pins?
No. Pin friction and bar behavior differ from equal blocks.
Can I enter an above-knee pull?
No. Lockout-only pulls are outside this source standard.
Does the tier rank my Block Pull?
No. It ranks only the predicted floor Deadlift.
Should I attempt the center prediction?
No. Use it as a planning estimate and confirm it through normal training.