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whats your intervals of increasing weight

muscelove

New member
im talking about intervals of increasing wieght. for me its about every 3 week for a deal lift. Its about 10 lbs for the deadlift. Just wondering how this compares to everyone else. Not just the deadlift either
 
I'd think more about percentages than a fixed increment accross all lifts and lifters. You probably should also understand that some people's plans involve, as coolcolj alluded to, a non-linear pattern or deal with loading in multiple ways. In the end, you want to add weight as frequently as possible with the goal of lifting as much as possible. But like I said, some people particularly those who are more advanced are not working linearly and the best way for them to post a big gain 8 months out will differ from that of someone less experienced.
 
I lift a certain weight until i am able to hit the reps then i bump the weight up; different poundages depending on the exercise.
 
About every week I try either
A) couple extra reps at the weight from last week
or
B) more weight
or
C) try to go slower on the negatives throughout the set and have more power on the positives :-)

Always pushing to get stronger.
 
I always try for more than last time. If I've just bumped the weight then I might lose some reps due to failure, which I might try to make up with extra sets, but once I've made my target reps/sets then it's time to move on to a new weight. There's no point sitting stagnant with a weight you've already mastered.
 
Once I start lifting again (I hate you, discs) I'll increase the weight as often as I can. I don't see any reason to wait around to up the weight, so long as you safely completed your reps the previous time, while being humble (i.e., no cheating or forced reps, proper form, etc.). I'd only make an exception if I was juicing (which I will never do) simply because the gains would come so quickly, I'd be afraid of going too fast and leaving my tendons and connective tissues in the dust.

Beginners should also be wary of jumping too quickly in order to avoid this. Then again, Rippetoe has people adding 100 lbs. to their squat in a relatively short time, and they seem fine.
 
Anthrax Invasion said:
Once I start lifting again (I hate you, discs) I'll increase the weight as often as I can. I don't see any reason to wait around to up the weight, so long as you safely completed your reps the previous time, while being humble (i.e., no cheating or forced reps, proper form, etc.). I'd only make an exception if I was juicing (which I will never do) simply because the gains would come so quickly, I'd be afraid of going too fast and leaving my tendons and connective tissues in the dust.

Beginners should also be wary of jumping too quickly in order to avoid this. Then again, Rippetoe has people adding 100 lbs. to their squat in a relatively short time, and they seem fine.

I had an 8 month lay-off not so long ago, and although muscle memory is a wonderful thing, my tendons are knackered! I'm having to take 9-10 days before I'm ready to do the same muscles again. So my message is - take your time!
 
You shouldn't need a lot of time between each lifting session, just don't up the weights too fast. Frequent training (within reason) shouldn't bother the tendons. Then again, maybe your situation is different.
 
blut wump said:
Let the body work as a whole while the whole body is a weak sack of crap.

I guess that means you still need to do this, huh Blut? :chomp: PWNED

It's all good, you just make it easy. :evil:
 
When you're fresh back from a layoff it's generally not a good idea to try to dive back into your previous PRs at the earliest and fastest you can. Let your body re-acclimatize to the workload over a few weeks, or months if a long layoff. Keep increasing the load from workout to workout within your chosen timescale. When you get back to where you were, there's a good chance that you can keep going through it into new territory.

I've had layoffs lasting years at times. I always come back with whole body workouts for the first two or three months while everything remembers what working out is all about and to allow some decent synergy in my workouts.


Sorry, AI, could you explain that last post?
 
Some people are so sharp they'll end up cutting themselves.

Increase the weight whenever you can, just do it moderately.
 
I liked doing increasing reps with the same weight for 4 weeks and the upping the weight and dropping the reps like this:

week:..sets/reps/weight

1:.......3x5x250

2:.......3x6x250

3:.......3x7x250

4:.......3x8x250

5:.......3x5x275

6:.......3x6x275

7:.......3x7x275

8:.......3x8x275

9:.......3x5x295


Worked good for me when I was a few years i -obviously best for compound lifts.
 
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