I've been training seriously for about four years. For most of that time, grip has been my limiting factor on deadlifts and pull-ups — not my back, not my legs, not my lats, but my hands. I'd be mid-set on a heavy deadlift, the bar would be moving well, and then my grip would start to slip and I'd have to terminate the set before my muscles had actually given out. It's one of the most frustrating experiences in training: knowing you had more in the tank but being stopped by something that felt like it shouldn't be the limiting factor.
My gym doesn't allow powder chalk. It's a commercial gym with a no-chalk policy, which is common — powder chalk creates dust, coats the equipment, and requires cleaning. I'd been using lifting straps as a workaround, which helped but felt like cheating — straps bypass the grip problem rather than solving it, and I wanted to develop actual grip strength rather than compensate for its absence.
I found the Cerberus Strength Atlas Grip Liquid Chalk and it solved both problems simultaneously.
What Liquid Chalk Actually Is
Liquid chalk is magnesium carbonate — the same substance as powder chalk — suspended in an alcohol solution. You apply it to your hands, the alcohol evaporates quickly, and you're left with a thin, even layer of chalk on your palms and fingers. No dust, no cloud, no residue on the equipment. The chalk adheres to your skin rather than floating in the air, which is why it's permitted in gyms that ban powder.
The Cerberus Strength Atlas Grip formula contains 80% proof alcohol, which serves a dual purpose: it's the carrier that delivers the chalk and dries quickly, and it's also an antibacterial agent. Gym equipment is not clean. Applying something antibacterial to your hands before gripping a barbell that hundreds of people have touched is a genuine hygiene benefit, not just a marketing claim.
First Use: The Deadlift Test
I ordered through Altoe and used it for the first time on a deadlift session. The application is straightforward: shake the bottle, apply a small amount to each palm, rub your hands together, let it dry for about ten seconds. The drying is fast — the alcohol evaporates quickly and you're left with a dry, chalked surface that feels immediately different from bare skin on a bar.
The first set told me everything I needed to know. I pulled a weight I'd been struggling to hold for a full set and the bar stayed locked in my hands through the entire rep range. My grip didn't slip. My muscles gave out before my hands did, which is exactly how it should be. I stood there for a moment after the set and felt something I can only describe as relief — the limiting factor had been removed.
Six Months On: What's Changed in My Training
I've been using Atlas Grip for six months. The changes in my training have been significant:
My deadlift has progressed consistently for the first time in over a year. Previously, grip failure was capping my progress — I couldn't add weight because I couldn't hold the bar through a full set at heavier loads. With the grip problem solved, I've been able to train the movement properly and the strength gains have followed.
My pull-up volume has increased substantially. I was terminating sets early due to grip fatigue; now I terminate them when my lats give out, which is the correct limiting factor. The difference in training stimulus is significant — I'm getting more out of every pull-up set than I was before.
I've also stopped using lifting straps entirely. I wanted to develop grip strength rather than bypass it, and the liquid chalk has allowed me to do that — by keeping the bar in my hands through full sets, I'm actually training my grip rather than compensating for its weakness.
The No-Dust Advantage: Gym-Friendly and Practical
The no-dust formula is the feature that makes this usable in my gym. I apply it, it dries, and there's no visible residue on the bar or the floor. The gym staff have never commented on it. I've used it at three different gyms over the past six months and it's been accepted at all of them without question.
The 250ml bottle has lasted me about four months of three-to-four sessions per week, which is good value. I use a small amount per session — a 50p-coin-sized squeeze per hand is enough for a full training session, including re-application between heavy sets.
What I'd Tell Any Lifter Whose Grip Is the Limiting Factor
If your grip is failing before your muscles, fix the grip. Don't use straps as a permanent solution — they bypass the problem rather than solving it. The Cerberus Strength Atlas Grip Liquid Chalk is the solution: no dust, gym-friendly, antibacterial, and genuinely effective at keeping the bar in your hands through heavy sets. My deadlift has progressed more in the six months since I started using it than in the year before. That's the measure.
- Magnesium carbonate formula — the same substance as powder chalk, without the dust
- 80% proof alcohol carrier — dries in seconds, antibacterial for gym hygiene
- No dust — accepted at gyms with powder chalk restrictions
- Long-lasting hold — adheres better than powder, lasts through heavy sets
- Handmade in the UK — CERBERUS Strength quality from a specialist strength brand
- 250ml bottle — approximately four months at 3–4 sessions per week
- Versatile — weightlifting, gymnastics, climbing, any grip-dependent activity
- Simple application — shake, apply, dry in ten seconds, train
Get yours here: Cerberus Strength Atlas Grip Liquid Chalk – 250ml Anti-Bacterial
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Kieran Walsh is a software developer and recreational powerlifter from Manchester who trains four days a week and takes his lifting seriously without taking himself too seriously. He writes about the training products that have genuinely made a difference — no gifted items, no brand relationships, just honest experience from someone who measures results in kilograms.
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