Topside said:Question:
Im doing the full 9 weeks of the program, im in week 7 now. Once the cycle is over you think it's ok to play around with loading and unloading and see what works, just experiment you know? Say once the last week of the intensity phase is over then deload again, then load say for 3 weeks then deload then load for 3 weeks then deload then maybe hit the intensity phase. So instead of it being a 9 week program it extends it to 12 weeks. 2 3 week periods of load, 2 weeks of deloading, then say 4 weeks of intensity. Really enjoy this program and i know the way it's set up is tried and true but i guess you never know what could happen good or bad from a little tweaking. Thanx.
Madcow2 said:When you add volume, you don't just impact a single muscle or muscle group. This increases the load on the entire body. Now, in my program description linked in the TOC (http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showpost.php?p=4764723&postcount=381) I do say that for more advanced trainees you can transition the 1x5 to 5x5. Doing it for chest is going to be less taxing than doing it for the entire slew of exercises (thinking the squat mainly and then adding in 5x5 for the rows) so it's something to consider just doing one.
All that said, you really should have a good foundation first and you can't do this midway through the program because it screws with the volume a bit. Your strength is obviously increasing pretty quickly, it's tough to make an argument that you require more volume when your bench is shooting up like this. The issue you are having with your chest is that the flat bench was not a core lift and lagged some of your other work, most noticably your dip. So when you dropped everything and went with a program that focused heavily on bench, even though you are getting better fast, you've had to take a step backward. I gave a pretty detailed analysis here: http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showpost.php?p=4870667&postcount=478
This will resolve itself fairly quickly but like I said, it's really hard to make the case that you require more volume when your bench is shooting up like that in 3 weeks - something is obviously working and working well. The strength increase is all you can control, size will come with strength and increased capacity over a decent rep/set range. You are doing that now but you are paying the price for having a weak realtive bench and over-relying on the dip. I guess you could have run this cycle with dips and not bench but you can't do less than bodyweight so it causes issues and it's not as good of a movement IMO but that's not too important.
My best advice is to be patient, don't screw with it and finish it out. You'll have a solid bench at that point. Run a 4 week program and incorporate your dips or whatever (you'll find a lot more parity between your dip and bench power after this cycle) then step back into a longer foundation style program like this one and work hard for a period.
Topside said:Do you think this program is good to run while training for a DII basketball team. I start on monday running 3 miles 3 days a week, and then doing stations consisting of line jumps, jumping rope, defensive slides, sprints, and 17s (running from baseline to baseline 17 times in under a min). To gain weight obviously i'd have to eat like a mad man, but aside from gaining weight how do you think the 5x5 will fair thrown into my bball program.
Boss101 said:When I started the program I was using standard bbing splits for over 6 months with no breaks from training just heavy lifting all the time. I'm going to deload again I'm thinking I was overtrained before starting the routine and I didn't get as much as I could from it. I really screwed up this first cycle when I think about it now I should have ran a 6 week loading peroid instead of 4 weeks.
Boss101 said:Thank you Madcow, I'll take a light week and start back again. Theres nothing wrong with the way I ramp my weights right? During the volume phase I ramp each week by 15-20lbs and during the intensity phase by 5-10lbs.
This time for my BB Row I'm thinking something like this,
week 1 180lbs
week 2 205lbs
week 3 220lbs New Record
week 4 225-230lbs New Record
Anyone who has tried to lay out a table using forum software will understand. It is the ultimate bitch. Looks a lot better than most of my attempts.TheOak84 said:sorry about the shitty layout, i copy and pasted, didnt turn out too well
Madcow2 said:Anyone who has tried to lay out a table using forum software will understand. It is the ultimate bitch. Looks a lot better than most of my attempts.
Blut Wump said:Another example: yesterday (week3/day1) I grunted, literally, through my five sets of squats, half expecting each set to be resulting in failure. I got to my bench pyramid and reached the top set to find it a little easier than expected so added more weight and did a sixth set, mentally crossing off my first set as a warmup. Is this more what you mean?
Madcow2 said:Not a good idea to do consistently with this program but fine every now and then. I'd try to avoid it in the record weeks though.
Topside said:Not sure if this link is up somewhere in these pages but it's a good read about planned overtraining and recovery. Coolcolj posted it in his creation of an explosive mofo thread.
http://www.higher-faster-sports.com/PlannedOvertraining.html
From the Article said:Volume Phase 4 weeks - Deloading Period 1 week - Intensity Phase 4 weeks. Sets and reps for the intensity phase is in parentheses.
M:
Squat 5x5 (3x3)
Bench 1x5 (1x3)
Row 1x5 (1x3)
W:
Squat 5x5 with 15-20% less than Monday (drop this lift)
Deadlift 5x5 (3x3)
Military 5x5 (3x3)
Pullups 5x5 (3x3)
F:
Squat 1x5 (1x3)
Bench 5x5 (3x3)
Row 5x5 (3x3)
Volume Phase - Weeks 1-4:
Use 5 sets of 5 reps with the same working weight for all sets. Increase the weight week to week and try to set records in weeks 3 and 4. For exercises you do twice a week you have a separate day which you perform a single set of 5 reps with the goal of setting records on the 3rd and 4th week for your best set of 5. Don't start the weights too high. Lower the weight if need be but get the sets and reps in - except where you are setting records.
Deloading Week - Week 5:
On week 4 drop the Wednesday squat workout, begin using the Intensity set/rep scheme (in parentheses), and keep the weight the same as your last week in the Volume Phase.
Intensity Phase - Week 6-9:
Everything is the same principal except that you use 3x3 and 1x3 setting records on week 8 and 9. No Wednesday squatting. The important aspect of this phase is the weight increases. If you are so burned out that you need an extra day here and there that's okay. If you can't do all the work that's okay too. Just keep increasing the weight week to week.
Madcow1 - FI Post 7/29/2003 said:Volume Phase 4 weeks - Deloading Period 1 week - Intensity Phase 4-5 weeks
M:
Squat 5x5 (3x3)
Bench 1x5 (1x3)
Row 1x5 (1x3)
W:
Squat 5x5 with 15-20% less than Monday (drop this lift)
Deadlift 5x5 (3x3)
Military 5x5 (3x3)
Pullups 5x5 (3x3)
F:
Squat 1x5 (1x3)
Bench 5x5 (3x3)
Row 5x5 (3x3)
Volume Phase - Weeks 1-4:
I use 5 sets of 5 reps at working weight standard (I don't count warmups) increasing the weight week to week and trying to set records in weeks 3 and 4. I try to focus on acceleration during these days. For exercises which I do twice a week I have a separate day which I perform a single set of 5 reps with the goal of setting records on the 3rd and 4th week for my best set of 5. For the squat I use Wednesday and utilize between 10-20% less than my working weight on the Monday workout - no goals for this. The main point here is the volume. Don't start the weights too high. Lower the weight if need be but get the sets and reps in - except where you are setting records. I also do a fair amount of warmups to keep my volume decently high on the single sets of 5 reps days.
Deloading Week - Week 5:
On week 5 drop the Wednesday squat workout, begin using the Intensity set/rep scheme (in parentheses), and keep the weight the same as your last week in the Volume Phase.
Intensity Phase - Week 6-10:
Everything is the same principal except that you use 3x3 and 1x3 setting records on week 9 and 10 (week 4 and 5 of this phase). No Wednesday squatting. The important aspect of this phase is the weight increases. If you are so burned out that you need an extra day here and there that's okay. If you can't do all the work that's okay too. Just keep increasing the weight week to week.
Madcow2 said:Hilarious - I don't fucking believe it. The sample workout is taken directly from my post on Fortified Iron a few years back. Other than some basic clean up this is a direct cut/paste. Check this out:
It's a great article and he credits the right people (it's not like I played any part in the design of this workout anyway other than the fact that the author is using my 3x per week frequency to peak strength in the intensity phase). I should probably email my new writeup since it is vastly improved. Hell, this is probably the easiest to understand example of dual factor theory I've seen so I'll be saving this link for future inclusion in the TOC.
BTW - in case this comes off wrong. I don't care at all about the cut/paste - it's kind of funny to come accross it so randomly. I am glad to see he cleaned it up a bit, that original was written in a rush a few years ago and never proofed. I know it bothered me enough to rewrite it. If anyone wants to cut/paste anything I've written feel free. The whole point is to get the info to people that need it in the first place so if someone finds something valuable they are free to use, publish, distribute ect...
I don't care in the least (although it best not count against any of my 15 minutes of fame as that is supposed to be something a bit grander than this). I actually wrote him an email and pointed out where my original explanation wasn't clear. I'm more concerned with people using that version and not using a pryamid on the 1x5/1x3 days and not understanding why they are fatigued again around weeks 8/9.ceasar989 said:wow...yo man..madcow, just give me the word and I'll go after him. I got your back (not that you need it lol).
Tom Treutlein said:I think I'm going to try the original writeup of the program, where you use 5x5 and 3x3 on Monday and Friday, rather than subbing in the 1x5 and 1x3. In all honesty, the volume for my upper body seemed a bit low with the 1x5/1x3 days.
Blut Wump said:Did anyone else notice that he talks consistently of 3/1 load/deload schema and then gives an example using 4 weeks of loading without explanation. Still, it is a very clear write-up of dual-factor principles.
Blut Wump said:Madcow, you do mention that you do a lot of warmups to get the required volume on the 1x5 exercises. That's close enough to a pyramid.
Santa_Claus said:I made the mistake of doing deadlift as my last exercise...
I had to do my deads with much less weight because my form was extremely bad with the standard load.
Should I add another volume week to compensate for my shitty deadlift workout or should I just shrug it off and go on?
Also...
My form really suffers when im in the 5 rep range because the weight is very heavy for me. My lower back is straight but I can't keep my middle and upper back straight.
Should I lower the weights until my whole back is straight?
Madcow2 said:This kind of concerns me. If you are using the dual factor version, good foundation and strong technique is assumed. You can't risk building quickly to heavy loading weights if your technique is bad (i.e. you are asking for an injury).
My suggestion since it doesn't look like you've been training the squat or the deadlift for a long time is to use the novice version in the TOC, drop the weight until technique is solid, and build up from there. Being new to these very core lifts a periodized program is the wrong way to approach it. You'll get as much and possibly even more gains out of just running it the basic way.

JL_204 said:I wish i would have started with the single factor or took a week off before jumping into the 5x5. Im in the 3rd week of loading and i feel fatigue setting in. Ive been lifting for 2 years and thought i could handle it, but with work, school, and everthing else i feel drained.
Tom Treutlein said:Work on the squat. I'm surprised your bench is higher. Not meant to be cruel, by the by. Just saying, it's odd to see a bench higher than a squat. I'm guessing you started squatting after benching.
Madcow2 said:1) week 1 seems close to your maxes. It costs very little to be conservative and starting high is the best way to blow the program.
2) I'm guessing weeks 4/5 are both loading? If so, the weight should go up for the 2nd week. The final 2 weeks are the real key to this phase. If you want week 5 to be deloading you need to change the protocol to the next phase (maybe this is why the weights don't move - except military which goes up 10lbs?)
3) You need to be running a squat based program. Your bench is totally out of proportion. You also need to get your row up within some reasonable range of your bench. This is long-term stuff but that bench is head and shoulders over your squat and dead. I don't mean to dump on you but typically someone hitting raw benches of in the 300 range should be squatting in the 400s at a minimum (deads should be there too). You will be amazed at what this type of training does for your physique - your bench will likely go up too just from improvement in the rest.
You could plan yourself one or two one-month mesocycles to concentrate on your upper body. You could still have squats in there but maybe at a higher rep-range or even try some squat variants like box squats which might stress your posterior chain less or in a fashion which conflicts less with your job.Tom Treutlein said:Yeah, I took that into account. I didn't want to calculate that much though, so I did it quick in my head. In any case, I can't see how I wouldn't make gains still. I agree that squats can be a good exercise to add total body mass, due to the stimulative effect it has, but you won't get a thicker upper body with just squatting - the other stuff is the meat and potatoes. That's how I feel, anyway. I figure I'll give it one solid run without squats. Should I make no progress, then I'll just make sure never to make that mistake again. However, if I make some nice gains, then I'll know where I stood was correct.
Of couse, I'll miss squatting anyway, but for now this is a more viable option. I can also throw in a few other things if I really wanted to load myself more. I may run sprints, actually. That will certainly wear me down - maybe worse than squats.
blut wump said:There comes a point in any discussion like this on almost any worthwhile topic where you have to look at whether a solution is topical or fundamental. A topical solution being one that works in a restricted set of circumstances and a fundamental one being one that applies at all times and can also explain why a topical solution works when it does and why it fails at other times.
If dual-factor training can take and enhance a few tens of thousands of lifters and general athletes who have tried conventional training and hit long-term plateaus and can also explain why they were hitting those plateaus then I have to think that it offers a more fundamental understanding of how the body is working. You simply do not find successful athletes who train by conventional bodybuilding methods without copious quantities of drugs. They don't even train horses or dogs that way.
I wouldn't suggest that it offers a complete understanding of how to grow and perform better but it does offer another step beyond the simple "train and grow" that we all begin with.
Madcow's 5x5 is just one program built around the dual-factor method. It's not some holy grail of bio-enhancement and he most of all suggests that once you have an understanding of the principles involved that you should be tailoring your own program for your own needs. Westside does the same: Tate has a 9-week beginners' program after which you're your own coach.
It's in the details where we get down to all of us being different yet fundamentally the same. We end up with differing applications of the underlying fundamentals. It's important to reach the fundamentals first, though, and these are what most of the discussions on here on dual-factor topics relate to: knowing why it works; why it must work for everyone and how to make it work best for an individual. Part of that knowledge is going to include knowing why the old, conventional BB methods really don't measure up and yet also why they are valid methods.
slyder190 said:Madcow, a few more questions again. But first, I must say yhat while I have not put on any size thus far (week 6 point), My strength has really taken off. I can't thank you enough!
slyder190 said:Now for the questions-
I never use a weight belt. I have a "sway back", which sways inward at the bottom of my spine (and causes my ass to stick out), and have had back pain on and off for years. Nothing too major outside the herniation I had one time. My back is a bit sore at times as I've gone up in weights, pretty sure it's from the squats. Should I wear a belt when going heavy now?
slyder190 said:You mentioned one can get stronger on a reduced calorire diet due to neural adaption. If this is the pathway, how is it that size often comes as well when not on a claoire restriced diet? Just curious. I would like to up my calories, but summer is upon us (and yeah, I guess I'm vane).
slyder190 said:And I would like to hit DFHT at some point in the fall. Can you help guide me through it on this thread as you've done so well in doing so with 5x5 for everyone?
Topside said:Question week 9 is approaching (in week 8 now). When i finish week 9 im about 99% sure im gonna deload again i think my body willl probably need it. Since this phase we are already doing 3x3 how would you deload that. Say week 9 my bench is 180 row is 190 and squat is 235 all for 3, do you just repeat week 9 or drop it down to 2x3 or something like that?
madcow2 said:Post Cycle:
Depending upon how you feel, it's probably a good idea to deload again before moving back into another volume phase if you ran the 3x per week like I outlined above. See the alternative schedule below and perform this light for 2 weeks working on speed/acceleration. If you ran the 2x alternate schedule below for your deload/intensity you can likely move straight back into another volume phase.
psychedout said:Madcow, what do you think about this (I think it would still be dual factor theory training). Example is below.
Here is how it would look for a given exercise:
Loading phase:
Weeks 1-2
-Warm up set(s)
-10 reps
-8 reps
-6 reps
None of these sets are pushed to failure, they would be stopped 1-2 reps short of failure (thus intensity is not 100%).
Week 3-4
-Warm up set(s)
-10 reps x failure
-8 reps x failure
-6 reps x failure (lets say this number is 200pds).
These sets are max intensity sets.
Deloading phase (using the same lift that was at 200pds before)
Week 5
-Warm up set(s)
-3reps x 150 easy
-2reps x 175 easy
-5reps x 200 pds (step back 1 rep with the wieght here and no real volume prior to this set really)
Weeks 6 to approx. 10.
- Light triple
- Light double
- Intense 5RM (adding 5-10 pounds per week to this lift)
Basically the deloading would be run until a wall is hit and lifts are not moving up anymore.
If I need to clarify something in there, feel free to let me know.![]()
Counting reps isn't really the best way. Use weight x reps for every set and add it all up for everything during the week. This will give you total pounds applied over a period which is a better proxy for load (actually it is load but but sometimes reality is different than pounds i.e. adding up the massive weight you can legpress and assuming it is comparable to the squat).
There are a lot of ways of doing it really (some only count 80-85% or greater intensities, some OL programs only bother calculating the full lifts). The jist of it is that squatting is a lot more fatiguing than a pullup or press so total reps isn't the best way to think about it. Let me tell you that if you do the math and subtract the squatting load from the total load over the course of the volume phase - it's a damn big number and the squat is a very stimulative exercise so in reality I'd view the number of pounds you calc for squatting as a very conservative estimate of their true contribution.
Boss101 said:MC, when I squat my knees feel really stiff and tight. I do some light warmups my knees still bother me. I've changed my stance and had a friend check my form. Any suggestions?
JL_204 said:Has anyone thrown in power shrugs with their 5x5 routine?
If so, where did you put them and how were the results?
When i do the 5x5 for the second time I plan on doing them. I did a few today with a light wieght just to see how they were and i really like them.
Santa_Claus said:Hi , I do this workout in single factor and I was wondering if it was okay to add a few push-up sets(to prepare for basic training) here and there on off-days without it affecting my bench performance.
Row...........5x5.........
JL_204 said:Has anyone thrown in power shrugs with their 5x5 routine?
If so, where did you put them and how were the results?
When i do the 5x5 for the second time I plan on doing them. I did a few today with a light wieght just to see how they were and i really like them.
lavi said:madcow, a while ago you posted that those with over 2x bodyweight deads should scale down the deads to 3x3 for the duration of the program. i was wondering if it would be a bad idea to change it to 1x3 in the intensity phase so it kind of ramps up like the rest of the program? currently i deadlift 3x bodyweight (i dont weigh too much). i would think itd be weird to do 3x3, do 3x3 at the deloading phase, and then continue with the 3x3 no?
JL_204 said:My friend is going to start the novice version next Monday.
How long should he stay on this program before he goes to the dual factor?
I would imagine for as long as he's gaining consistantly, but he sees me doing the dual factor and hes anxious to start. I dont blame him, he used to bench more than me and now im 30 pounds ahead of him.
BTW hes been training for a year now.
Blut Wump said:I'm moving into the deload phase next week and think that I will try the 2x protocol this time around. During the volume phase, I've been doing box-squats on Wednesdays and decided that I like them. As such, for the intensity phase, I am thinking of making them my Monday squat and keeping the Oly squats as my light Wednesday session.
Currently, my Wednesday box-squat is a shade higher than, but comparable with, my top set of Friday deepsquats, which may have been reckless of me but I seem to have survived, and so I can track the percentages to use for the Weds light squats easily enough.
Can you see any problems with this that I should be aware of?
slyder190 said:Madcow, any harm in taking a week off after the 9 week cycle? I usually take a week off every 12 weeks.
And where do I begin with the poundages after I begin my next cycle?
Thanks.
Santa_Claus said:How do I determine the right amount exercise volume my body can take in a week?
For example, I used to do squats only once per week. Now I do train my legs three times a week using squats.
day 1: I do squats, 5 sets of 5 reps /w big weights*
day 2: I do front squats /w big weights
day 3: I do 5 sets of 5 reps /w medium weights
(*relatively speaking because 210lbs is big for me)
The strength of my legs is better. Before, I struggled to do 5 reps of 5 sets to parallel and now I can do the same weight, ass to the grass, with less hardship. Now my legs are bigger and stronger. In conclusion, I'd say that I didn't train my legs with enough volume. My volume has increased by about 2.5 and I made good gains. Right now, I follow the 5x5 exercise template but I don't do the actual dual-factor program. I like to do the compound exercises but im not ready for periodization yet.
My question to you is...How do I determine the right amount exercise volume my body(or body parts) can take in a week? Why 5 sets? how do you know that 5 sets is right and not 4 or 3 sets? For example, if 5 sets is the correct volume, why not do 2 sets of deadlifts on day 1, 2 sets of deads on day 2 and 1 sets of deads one day 3? Volume stays the same, only frequency changes and the muscles stays stimulated throughout the week.
Thanks
Madcow2 said:Active recovery is usually preferable except in extreme cases or for mental health and a break after a competition. It won't kill you though.
There is an entire section on setting up your second cycle in my description linked in the TOC: http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showpost.php?p=4764723&postcount=381
It's very general and conservative. I don't know how strong you got or where you are at. You need to be breaking records and really pushing in the final two weeks of the first phase. Set your weights according to your best estimate and either adjust on the fly or add an extra week if you need to jump up too much due to strength increase.
slyder190 said:I read over the link, but I still don't know what percentage of weights to use or anything for the 2 weeks of deloading again you recomend. For example, if my max on bench is say 315 for 1x3 and 275 is my 3x3 bench max, what type of weights would I be using in the lfting regimine in the 2 weeks of the post cycle? Not quite sure I follow what i should be doing altogether. Ami switching to a 2x a week workout schedule? Using 3x3 for given weights or percentages of max weights? Sorry bro, I'm just lost.
Absolutely not. Failure may occur in that you don't get your target number for that week but it is not the goal and you certainly don't want to be setting numbers where you are blowing every single exercise. Nothing special about failure or magic in that last rep - except for the fact that it burns the CNS significantly. Concentrate on getting better and pushing your weights up. Push yourself hard (but be somewhat realistic and willing to adjust), if you fail in week 3, carry the weight forward a week.slyder190 said:And also, when you're in weeks where you're surpassing previous records, you are going to failure correct? just making sure.
Madcow2 said:You kind of need to go by feel. Do you feel like you are overreaching again? If you don't feel like you did in week 4 (Assuming you set the weights right) then take a single week of 2 workouts at 50-65% or some such and begin the volume again. Point being, it should be easy, work on acceleration a bit or something but you want to keep everything low for a week or two before jumping back in. You can also take a light week here and then start the volume phase fairly lightly, this can work. If you are severely burned, you might need two weeks of the 2x per week. I can't really help you more than that, it's science but it's also a bit of art and since I'm not you and I don't have any reference for you the best thing you can do is go by feel. THat's why I'm always stressing for people to pay attention, be conservative, and learn in their first run through. The more data you have, the better decisions you can make.
Absolutely not. Failure may occur in that you don't get your target number for that week but it is not the goal and you certainly don't want to be setting numbers where you are blowing every single exercise. Nothing special about failure or magic in that last rep - except for the fact that it burns the CNS significantly. Concentrate on getting better and pushing your weights up. Push yourself hard (but be somewhat realistic and willing to adjust), if you fail in week 3, carry the weight forward a week.
slyder190 said:I understand the whole feel and individuality point. I'm still unclear as to what type of weights to use post cycle. Are saying 50-65% of the weight I used for week 9? Using 50-65% for the 3x3 post cycle workouts?
And with failure, what I meant was this - this past week I got 315 for 1x3 for bench, but the final rep felt to me like it was probably the last rep I was going to be able to get. Is this okay? I went up 10lbs from the previous week. Not every 1x3 set feels like this. For example, with squats I finish the set on the third rep, but I know I could still get a few more. But like i said, for a few lifts, such as bench and deads, this past week, the third rep felt like it was the last one I could get.
Madcow2 said:I was thinking 50-65% of your 1RM for a week. Work on acceleration a bit. Really depends on how bad you feel.
Your meaning of failure is fine. You should be working ultra hard and really pushing yourself. If you got 315 for 3 on week 8 just barely, you'd add 5 lbs (have to add weight) and make sure you have a spot for week 9.
slyder190 said:I don't really know what my 1RMs are. How bout if i used like 75-80% of my 1x3 max?
And I had my Bf checked today. It was 6.5 roughly. I posted on the AAS board regarding some things in question, but I thin k it was fairly accurate. No wonder i can't gain weight. Your program has gotten me MUCH stronger for such a low BF though. I'm gonna maintain with regular BB style workouts after my run with your program is over, but not push myself to failure. Then when fall comes and I won't mind packing on the weight as much, I will give it another run or maybe go with DFHT to really maximize my gains with right amount of calories.
BionicBC said:Whatsup guys? Damn, this thread is STILL going, awesome. Whats up Madcow? I decided to run thru this one more time, before switching to a WSB type workout routine with box squats, exc. But im making great gains on my 2nd round of 5x5. My last time doing it, my finishing maxes were:
Squat-455
Bench-265 (yea, i know, its weakk, but it went up, thats what counts!)
Dead-455
I hit those maxes, if i recall, about 3 weeks into PCT from a cycle. I took roughly 2 weeks off, and then started up 5x5 again, and im in week 5, so its been about 2.5 months being "off". And im STRONGER than before, no joke. Guess it goes to show what proper training methods, coupled with a lot of calories can do! This time around, if i keep on how these first 5 weeks have gone, my NEW maxes should be:
Squat-500-550
Bench-280-290
Dead-525-550
I did get a Metal Viking Squat Suit for my b-day, but i only really use it and my knee wraps on attempts over 80% o my 1rm. Anyways, been away awhile, and just wanted to update you all. Be good...
Bionic
TheOak84 said:for my 2nd run of the routine i was thinking this setup
SNIP
would this be too much?
i dont think so..
feedback please![]()
For sure. Thanks to madcow and bionic big time.Madcow2 said:It's exciting making gains and pushing your lifts up. I think it becomes more rewarding when you have a plan and are executing it session to session and then reap the rewards after it's all said and done. You can tell your original thread has become a pretty big resource and it seems a lot of people are happy with it and the progress they've been making. So if you think about it - you've actually played a pretty big part in making a number of people happier and more successful in their efforts. Pretty positive contribution IMO.
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