Yes the problem is most associate failure with form breakdown. But I've never seen a competitive bb who only goes say to 2 reps from failure. Like never ever do a leg extension where they don't quite achieve complete lockout, or a bicep curl where they never go to some form breakdown in the last reps, meaning beyond failure. Not once. But failure doesn't mean form breakdown if you're disciplined. A lifter who never plays at the failure point never goes anywhere ime, why that is I can't say. You watch pros like Jay Cutler lift and they say they never go to failure and yet they always, always continue many sets past form breakdown. Someone who is good at standardizing all the reps is Jordan Peters, it's not progress if your additional reps are shit.
joswift talked about his chins effort, said he could "only" do 3 reps, I bet it was to failure or very close and if he doesn't play at that point a significant amount of time I doubt he will increase his reps, say he stops every set 2 reps from failure. Ain't happening, but that's just like my opinion man
He even does negatives to get stronger (beyond failure training).
depends wht you mean by failure
You can take a set to a point where you literally cant do another rep, put the weight down count to three and then you can do another couple reps maybe more, is that more productive?
Many excercises you dont go to complete failure, how many people go to failure on squats?
I dont mean completing a rep and "believing" you cant do another, I mean failing by getting stuck at the bottom.
You can do barbell curls in perfect form and go to muscular failure, then start using the upper body sway and get at least three more , is that failure or beyond failure
As for the chins Im going for a maximum number and getting my body used to the movement so of course Im going to failure.
If I manage to get to 20 reps Im not going to be happy with doing it once, Im going to be able to get maybe 23-25 before Im happy
20 being a number I can do every day if I choose to not just a "every now and again" to prove to someone I can do it