Author Topic: Day In The Life Of A Supplement Company Owner - From 2016  (Read 8311 times)

Vince B

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Re: Day In The Life Of A Supplement Company Owner - From 2016
« Reply #75 on: May 28, 2020, 08:00:50 PM »

You got your PHD at the time when going to college and buying a  pastrami sandwich cost the same you moron.  There's also a thing called "changing your plans" but I honestly dont have no reason to care or answer to you.  The advice you gave should have been to Keith/Jabba The Hut.  Your friend is dead.  I'm not an inventor but if I was then I would waste my time building something that is not needed

You're a loser, you're old, and you have nothing

Ah, Melvin, nothing has changed in all these years. Your ignorance is actually increasing as you get older.


Vince B

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Re: Day In The Life Of A Supplement Company Owner - From 2016
« Reply #76 on: May 28, 2020, 11:26:37 PM »

Humble Narcissist

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Re: Day In The Life Of A Supplement Company Owner - From 2016
« Reply #77 on: May 29, 2020, 04:03:34 AM »

Gironda was a clever guy...nasty but smart. Gym was primitive but effective. Larry Scott was his most successful member. Larry gave a seminar at our gym in 1979. It was the best seminar a champion has given at our gym and that includes, Arnold, Franco, Sergio, Ray Mentzer and Lance Dreher.

Larry used the lying triceps extension that was very popular in the seventies. They had a primitive version of a machine at Nailon's Gym at Randwick. We all liked that machine but were limited by the amount of weight that could be used. When I started making gym equipment at a factory I had a go at building a lying triceps machine. I modified it and eventually got things right. You could adjust the height of the bench, the length of the user, and the width of space between the pads. I installed pads to prevent the elbows from going sideways during the movement. Also, on one machine you could change the height of the pulley. Larry figured the pulley should be about 5 feet off the floor. That is where I started. I think the ideal spot is a bit higher. Well, what happens is that there isn't much resistance when you complete the extension. So having the pulley a bit higher made it harder to finish the movement which helps make it more effective.

One of the problems with the lying triceps extension is that your palms are pronated and this eventually puts too much stress on some of the forearm muscles that end up sore. The solution is to do the movement with hands facing each other. You can do that on the modified Nautilus Triceps Machine. You do the movement like a Karate chop and remove the pronated position. I use this machine all the
time for triceps. Just this one machine and my triceps have never been bigger.

Larry Scott had some awesome training techniques and had a training newsletter for years teaching them.  He probably got most of the ideas from Gironda.