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Machine Chest Fly To Barbell Bench Press Conversion Calculator

This Machine Chest Fly to Barbell Bench Press calculator estimates Barbell Bench Press strength from Machine Chest Fly performance.

Enter your sex, bodyweight, and Machine Chest Fly performance to see your Barbell Bench Press estimate, expected range, strength tier, and ratio to bodyweight.

The calculator uses the conversion model for this tool to translate Machine Chest Fly performance into the Barbell Bench Press estimate. Use the result as a planning estimate, not a guaranteed max or attempt recommendation.

What Your Machine Chest Fly Says About Your Barbell Bench Press

A strict Machine Chest Fly set estimates normal Barbell Bench Press strength from the displayed both-side machine resistance you can press with a stable supported fly setup.

An 80 kg male pressing 80 kg for 6 strict reps produces a 96.0 kg Machine Chest Fly estimate and a 327.6 kg center Bench Press prediction, with a 256.0-524.6 kg range.

Strict machine fly setProfileSource estimateCenter Bench PressRange
80 kg x 6Male96.0 kg327.6 kg256.0-524.6 kg
60 kg x 6Female72.0 kg279.1 kg195.1-428.6 kg
70 kg x 10Male93.3 kg318.5 kg248.9-510.0 kg

The result is an estimate, not a guaranteed max. Its meaning depends on machine-setup consistency, stable pad contact, full lockout, and target-specific Bench Press skill.

How the Machine Chest Fly to Barbell Bench Press Conversion Works

The calculator estimates Machine Chest Fly 1RM and divides the source estimate by a sex-specific profile aligned across repository Machine Chest Fly and Bench Press strength tiers.

  • Source estimate: displayed both-side machine resistance in kg x (1 + reps / 30)
  • Male: center source / 0.293; range source / 0.375 to source / 0.183
  • Female: center source / 0.258; range source / 0.369 to source / 0.168
  • Bodyweight ratio: center Bench Press / bodyweight in kg

The profiles match Machine Chest Fly and Bench Press tier minima across canonical bodyweight bins. They provide one deterministic center and range for each sex.

With 80 kg x 6 for a male lifter, 96 / 0.293 = 327.6 kg. A female 60 kg x 6 set gives 72 / 0.258 = 279.1 kg.

That math is useful only when every source rep includes the stable supported fly setup defined below.

How Accurate Is This Machine Chest Fly Estimate?

The estimate is most useful when the source setup is consistent and the lifter regularly practices the normal Bench Press execution used for comparison.

The range covers variation across sex-specific tiers and bodyweight bins. It does not measure an individual.s machine geometry, stack calibration, seat setup, pad style, range, triceps strength, and Bench Press skill, or target-specific practice.

ConditionEffectWhy
Setup stays consistent on every repBetter comparisonThe defining source setup is preserved
Upper body shifts or arms press outEstimate can run highThe source no longer matches the required fly pattern
1-6 strict repsMore strength-specificLess fatigue-driven than a 10-rep set
Little Bench Press practiceActual target can differThe target still requires its own control and setup

Use the range to plan a comparison, then validate it with an actual Bench Press set instead of treating the center as an attempt.

Why Machine Chest Fly Strength Does Not Match Barbell Bench Press

Machine Chest Fly strength does not exactly match normal Bench Press because the source removes elbow-extension loading and depends on machine geometry.

Both lifts use the same flat barbell press, but machine setup, range, isolation control, triceps strength, and Bench Press skill can change the target result.

FactorMachine Chest FlyBarbell Bench Press
ExerciseSupported horizontal chest flyControlled standard touch
ReboundNo press-out or reboundCompound press with elbow extension
FinishFull elbow lockoutFull elbow lockout
80 kg x 6 male example96.0 kg source estimate327.6 kg center prediction

A lifter with strong machine-fly isolation but limited Bench Press practice may land differently from the center, while efficient target technique can improve the direct result.

What Counts as a Strict Machine Chest Fly Input

A valid entry is displayed machine resistance for 1-10 pec-deck repetitions with a repeatable open-chest start and controlled arm closure on every repetition.

Keep the upper body, upper back, hips, and shoulders supported against the pads and bring the handles or pads together without elbow-extension pressing, and press to full elbow lockout.

RuleValidInvalid
WeightBar plus all platesPer-side plate weight
ExecutionSupported horizontal chest flyUpper body movement, press-out, asymmetry, or rebound
Body positionStable head, shoulders, hips, and planted feetSpotter assistance or shifting setup
FinishFull elbow lockoutPartial or shortened lockout
Reps1-10 completed integersFailed, assisted, or fractional reps

If the setup or fly path stops remaining consistent after rep 6, stop the scored set at 6. The press-out or rebounded rep belongs to a different test.

Machine Chest Fly Estimate vs Barbell Bench Press Standards

The strength label belongs only to the predicted Barbell Bench Press 1RM.

Sex and bodyweight select the target Bench Press standards row, and the unrounded center estimate is compared with that row. The Machine Chest Fly source estimate is not assigned the target label.

For an 80 kg male using 80 kg for 6 machine-fly reps, the 327.6 kg prediction equals about 4.10 times bodyweight. That ratio and label describe the projected target.

Use the Machine Chest Fly standards page for the source and a direct Bench Press set for the strongest target check.

How to Improve Barbell Bench Press Transfer From Machine Chest Fly

Improve transfer by keeping the source setup stable while practicing the target’s controlled reversal and setup directly.

Observed gapLikely limiterAction
Machine fly strength rises, normal Bench stallsTarget setup or reversal skillPractice controlled normal Bench Press
Bench exceeds the centerEfficient target techniqueKeep machine fly work as strict supplemental practice
Upper body shifts on later repsSource control breaks downReduce weight and restore supported fly control
Lockout shortensThe scored set has endedStop before the invalid repetition

A 328 kg prediction is not permission to attempt 328 kg. Use recent target training to choose safe working weight.

When to Use This Machine Chest Fly Conversion Calculator

Use this calculator when you have a recent strict Machine Chest Fly set and want a planning estimate for normal Barbell Bench Press.

Use it whenDo not use it when
Every rep used the same supported fly setupThe upper body shifted or the arms pressed out
Total barbell weight is knownOnly per-side plates are entered
You want a range for comparisonYou need a max-attempt recommendation
The set used full lockoutThe set used Spoto, floor, board, pin, Smith, dumbbell, or assisted rules

For a direct target number, use the Bench Press 1RM calculator with an actual normal Bench Press set.

Use these four tools in order to classify the source, validate the target, and compare nearby Bench Press constraints.

When direct Bench Press performance conflicts with the conversion, trust the direct target set.

Machine Chest Fly to Barbell Bench Press FAQs

How should I set up the machine fly?

Use the same machine, seat height, start setting, and pad or handle position for every scored set.

Can I use a cable or dumbbell fly instead?

No. No. Use only the displayed both-side resistance from a dedicated seated pec-deck-style machine.

Why are male and female profiles different?

The model aligns sex-specific Machine Chest Fly and Bench Press tier minima across canonical bodyweight bins.

Does one rep use the entered weight exactly?

No. The approved v1 equation applies weight x (1 + reps / 30) to every valid rep count.

Does the strength label rank my Machine Chest Fly?

No. It ranks only the predicted Barbell Bench Press for the entered sex and bodyweight.

Can I use a Spoto, Floor Press, board, pin, Smith, or dumbbell set?

No. Those lifts change the source boundary. Use only a strict raw Machine Chest Fly set.

Should I attempt the center prediction?

No. Treat it as a planning estimate and validate it through normal Bench Press training.

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