Guinness5.0
New member
gjohnson5 said:.
There is a way to apply 100% for your strength to 50% of you 1RM. This is rep speed. By lifting say 50% as fast as possible while keeping your form. You can apply 100% of your contraction strength to a lower weight.
\Ponder this
Type something intelligible first. The above is so littered with sentence fragments ir's rendered useless.
I think what you're trying to grunt out is that one can substitute acceleration for intensity. While in some cases this is useful, to say that one can avoid heavy weights yet still achieve the same result misses the mark.
For one, 'speed reps' affect the nervous system to a much greater extent than the muscles. Speed/acceleration is more a function of nervous control than one of muscular strength (there are elements of both, of course).
Second, the fatigue one sustains from neural stimulation requires a longer rest interval then 'volume training' progressively performed short of failure. One can ht the gym more when one doesn't hammer the nervous system.
That's why you don't see WSB'ers hammering away at speed work for anything that would be considered taxing weights; speed work makes one stronger by coordinating the nervous system to fire the muscles in the most effocient manner possible. The weights are light to allow for rapid acceleration. However, to say that speed work eliminates the need for heavy weights is off base. I guaran-damn-promise that one will be able to put much more weight on the bar over a longer period of time by consistently getting stronger at a 'normal' rep cadence (up and down, nothing fancy) than by strictly focusing on exploding the weight from negative to eccentric.
Speed work has its place. It's not a substitute for heavy weight, and IMO it's not something that anyone but athletes or advanced lifters need to concern themselves with.
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