That's what I meant: I don't intentionally go to failure on the AW, it just works out that way sometimes. In theory, I should probably stop prior to failure, but I'm stubborn enough to push through all 10 or 15 reps.
Barbell rows are another option for back, but I don't usually do them because my form sucks.
project - please do NOT take offense at this - but with 10-15 reps)with a nomal rep cadence) you are getting nothing in terms of size OR strength under the TUT.....
project - please do NOT take offense at this - but with 10-15 reps)with a nomal rep cadence) you are getting nothing in terms of size OR strength under the TUT.....
I train to failure in just about every workout, but not on every set. My goal is to have pushed the muscle as far as I can by the end of the workout, so I'll use the heavy 5's to work on my strength and overall thickness, but then take it to the wall on the 8-10 rep sets, including a down the rack or drop set on the last one to make sure I've hit failure
Project I really don't know....in light of research on TUT and I believe the research......maybe changing the WAY you do the assistance work..ie - dropping the TUT to around the 20-40 second range to hit more strength fibers...{the fact that you are growing could be attributed to being in the fringe outer time of 60 seconds for size increases...if you are doing 15 reps with a 2-2 cadence - that makes sense).....maybe try that(dropping TUT) when you hit a plateau.....
I do not want anyone to think this is a personal attack......it's just that the research is/will be overwhelming....