2 reps for power6 reps for strength8 reps for mass12 reps for cuts20 reps for tone but careful not to overtrainAlso be sure to "rip the bar apart" and hit the muscle from "all angles" oh brother.Thanks and good luck.
This is a local 'PT' so it must be true.So no more than 60 reps in a 48 hour period. That's some confusion gone!
Hmm, I did a 100 pullups a day for a week workout once. It was "supplemental". Every time I though about it, I should go bang out another 10. I actually did it for 7 days. Kinda boring.Muscle gained? Zero.This "PT" might be onto something.
So there really must be a spot of sweetness on how we should do reps and work out.This nonlinear equation proves it.
It's not a simple mathematical equation. It has a lot to do with type of muscle fibers within the several muscles recruted during motion. That alone varies from individual to individual. So many variables you will never get exact numbers. I tried that approach when younger. Never got any reliable data. Just focus on lift things up and put them down.
No no no. You're wrong. No matter who you are, what you're on, what you train, the numbers don't lie. There are set universal numbers for specific results. This instinctive training bullshit is a fallacy perpetrated by Dorian to reduce efficiency of up and coming competitors training.