PR tracking

PR Tracker

Track personal records, estimated one rep maxes, and meaningful rep PRs without losing the training context around them.

Problem

A PR number loses meaning if you forget the reps, RPE, body context, or exercise variation.

RackMath answer

RackMath keeps personal records and estimated maxes connected to the exact sets that created them.

What it helps with

Make the useful answer part of the workout.

  • Track rep PRs and estimated one rep maxes.
  • See progress without testing true maxes constantly.
  • Connect PRs to exercises, workouts, and training blocks.

Why it belongs in the app

The website gives the generic value. RackMath saves the recurring workflow.

Free pages are best for quick answers. The app is where those answers become saved setups, workout history, progression, and repeatable training decisions.

Before the set

Know what to load or perform.

RackMath reduces the tiny decisions that slow down training: bar choice, plate math, warmup jumps, workout order, and target loads.

During the set

Keep logging simple.

The best tracker is the one that does not pull attention away from lifting. RackMath keeps set entry direct and uses saved context whenever possible.

After the set

Turn the result into next time.

History, PRs, RPE, and progression matter because they guide the next session. RackMath keeps those signals attached to the work that produced them.

Free value

Start on the public page.

Use the related free tool or template first. Open RackMath when you want to save, personalize, and repeat it.

Ready to use it?

Open RackMath to save this flow inside your actual training.