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Bb'ers, do you go light or heavy?

LB, you look lean bro - from your avatar and the previous avatar you looked about 6 ft 195 - nice genetics!! You must be built lime Arlovski dude!

Question - do you do most of your excercises in the 20 reps,15, 12, drop?
 
LB, you look lean bro - from your avatar and the previous avatar you looked about 6 ft 195 - nice genetics!! You must be built lime Arlovski dude!

Question - do you do most of your excercises in the 20 reps,15, 12, drop?

i am 6'4 242 and 7% bf. my avatars are very misleading lol. look for my thread with jay cutler. when you can reference me next to another big guy, you'll see
the difference and believe me, jay is big!!!

i work in three different rep ranges. high ( 15 20 ) mid ( 10 - 12 ) and norm bb'ing ( 7 - 9 )
 
Bro do you always use just 30 seconds rest between sets no matter what the movement?? :freak:

Also do you always keep the reps 8 and above regardless of the movement?

It is obviously working wonders for your physique, but I cannot even fathom how you can keep up such a furious pace!!!

I too come from a martial arts background but I can't even imagine myself using just 30 seconds rest for movements like deadlifts!!! If I used such low rest I would have to reduce the weight so much that I wouldn't feel any deep stimulation. Your gas tank obviously refuels about 10 times faster than mine!! :D

Depending on the movement and the weights, my rest period could extend to 1 min. Sometimes more on power exercises.

I do 1-2 rep presses sometimes to gain strength, so it's not always 8 reps bro...on some days, I decide to do 6 reps only, and on others I hit 12 reps min.

I don't like my body getting used to one thing.
 
I tried Omega's chest routing tonight. OMG that was Awesome pumps tho - I find it hard to believe that this can gain me as much lean mass as lifting heavy. Guess I am just indoctrinated with the old school lift heavy mentality.

Have other bro's made serious gains with this type of high rep/high intensity routine?

Chime in EF brothers!
 
^^^^ With the omega chest routine I went from a incline PR of 105 x 6 Dbs to 125 x 6 in 5 weeks (i wouldn't even know this but my curiosity got the best of me)

This is a great thread, just going to listen and learn. Thanks LB, CEO, ALC and everyone else for spreading some great knowledge.
 
I just do moderate weight most of the time, I tend to put some light rarely same goes for heavy. I like the pump from doing more reps.
 
This isn't Rocket Surgery!...:lmao: You gotta mix it up.
I think we all agree on that. So just about the time your body is getting used to a routine, say 90 days, switch everything up, in order to confuse your muscles and CNS into having to adapt. Or alternate every other workout. Heavy. Light. Heavy. Light.
That's the only way to keep growing, IMO.
 
This isn't Rocket Surgery!...:lmao: You gotta mix it up.
I think we all agree on that. So just about the time your body is getting used to a routine, say 90 days, switch everything up, in order to confuse your muscles and CNS into having to adapt. Or alternate every other workout. Heavy. Light. Heavy. Light.
That's the only way to keep growing, IMO.

Though I do alternate between very heavy periods of training and much lighter periods for a shorter time while I am building back up to another heavy burst, I disagree that routines should be switched up often. The only time I switch out an exercise is when I can no longer progress on it (when I cannot add more weight to the bar for the same reps I did last time, or do a few more reps at the same weight as last time).

As for switching out my routine, I have stayed with the same routine for 10 months, and even though I just came off a 3 month layoff of mostly lighter lifting, including probably 4-5 weeks off altogether in that time due to having a baby...I have gained about 20 lbs of lean mass in about 6 months of effort. This was after having been stalled on gains for a year. I haven't done any cycles either.

I think most poeple "mix it up" too often. They keep changing their routines and wonder why they're the same weight or only 5 lbs heavier than they were a year ago. How do they measure progression? They usually don't.

You're right, this ISN'T rocket science!!! No matter what Flex magazine or some "bodybuilding guru" tells you. Most people make the mistake of overanalyzing and second guessing themselves, and do one routine one month and Flex magazine's routine the next month, and something else they found online the month after. How the hell do you know what's working if you keep switching it every month?

Most of these guys barely grow, if at all...or they load up on a bunch of steroids and in two years and 5 cycles later, they've managed to gain a net of 25 lbs. Now instead of 6' tall, 175 lbs, they're 6' tall, and 200 lbs! What a waste! They could've saved the gear and just eaten more and trained right and got their 25 lbs in probably 12 to 18 months.

Bodybuilding is about progression. Keep progressing at an exercise or a program until you cannot progress anymore. Then, find a new exercise (for that bodypart) and progress at it until you cannot progress anymore, then go back to the old exercise and you'll find you can blow away your old best effort.

Think about it this way, if you were able to add just 5 lbs. to your bench press every week, in a year (52 weeks), you'd be pressing 260 lbs. more than you could a year before. So if your 5 rep max was 200 lbs., your new 5 rep max would be 460! But maybe you took a week off every 8 weeks, and another week off at christmas, so you only had 46 weeks of 5 lb. progression on your bench. So, instead of a 5RM of 460, your 5RM is 430. You suck! :D Wouldn't you just hate to add another 230 lbs. to your bench in a year? Inch by inch. Those 2.5 lb. plates are your best friends in the gym. That progression would probably equate to another inch to inch and a half of thickness (new muscle) on your chest!

Think I am lying? Go out and try it! Prove me wrong! Even if you didn't add 230 lbs. to your bench in a year, I bet you'd get a hell of a lot bigger doing it this way than whatever way you were doing it.

(the "you's" in this post are not directed at anyone in particular (even though I replied to your post, halfcenturian), I'm just talking to anyone who's listening and hopefully someone learns something)
:)
 
I think a large part of "progressing" is learning to listen to your body and seeing how your body reacts to diff. training methods.
 
I think a large part of "progressing" is learning to listen to your body and seeing how your body reacts to diff. training methods.

Not really what I was talking about at all. Pretty much the opposite. Sounds like you're just trying to justify changing a routine every 30/60/90 days. Hey, if it's working for you, awesome! It doesn't work for 99% of gymgoers.
 
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