An experiment was performed to evaluate the motions of the lumbar spine during a constant load velocity lift. For the purposes of this study, a constant load velocity refers to the linear vertical velocity of the load. This vertical load velocity was controlled using a modified angular isokinetic dynamometer, which produced linear isokinetic motion during a lift. A lumbar monitor was used to observe the position, velocity, and acceleration changes that occurred in the lumbar spine during the lifting task. The results indicate that under constant load velocity conditions, significant angular accelerations occur at the lumbar level. The nature of these accelerations was found to depend on several variables associated with a lifting task, such as the load velocity and the asymmetry of the lift. The physical significance of these results would be increased spinal loading above that which would be predicted using a static model.