Thursday, May 1, 2014

New May 2014 training split

Monday

Chest + tri

Heavy 6 rep
3 exercises chest
2 exercises tri

Upper abs

-

Tuesday

Back + Bi

Heavy 6 rep
3 exercises back
2 exercises bi

Lower abs
-

Wednesday

Cardio

-

Thursday

Shoulders + legs

Obliques abs

-

Friday

Chest +Tri

12 reps x 4 exercises chest
12 reps x 3 exercises Tri

Upper abs

-

Saturday

Cardio + Bi

Lower abs

-

Sunday

Shoulders + legs

Obliques abs

posted from Bloggeroid

Best advise on Big Muscle Chest Gain

There are no two ways about it, if you want a big chest, you better get ready to lift big. The biggest mistake I see in the gym is the rookie 17-year-old doing endless sets of cable flyes. Everyone seems to worry about the small details before they even have the muscle to make those details stand out.
 
For a big chest, the best things you can do are heavy compound (multi-joint) movements. No matter if you're hitting a flat bench or an incline bench with dumbbells, you have to put extreme stress on the muscle fibers to make them grow.

Generally, this happens best in the six-rep range. Now, I know every bodybuilding book you have ever read says to do 12 reps, but in my experience that number isn't enough to stimulate the proper motor units and fast-twitch muscle fibers.

You need to do heavier sets. Teach the central nervous system to fire more motor units at the same time, and muscles can contract faster, tighter, and harder.

But we're not done yet! Even after we have taught more muscle fibers to fire more effectively, we need to cause hypertrophy to get that muscle to blow up.

The most effective way to do this is by training your chest twice per week, every week.

The Big Chest Breakdown

Your split for chest should comprise two days. The first chest day will be low-volume, high- intensity training. Even though you only do six reps, the weight should be heavy enough that you reach failure on that sixth rep. You'll do 10 total sets in the 6-rep range over three different movements. Give your chest at least 72 hours of rest before you hit it again.

The second day will consist of higher-volume, lower-intensity work. Notice, I didn't say "low intensity"—I said "lower." For this workout, you do 15 total sets in the 12-30 range over four different movements.

Better Chest Moves

What separates the big boys from the rest of the crowd is that nice V-shaped notch of muscle right by the clavicle. No one respects droopy-looking pecs—they just look weird and weak. Here are some effective moves you can implement for a bigger, badder chest.

1. Incline Bench Press
The most common exercise to create that upper chest is the incline bench. And while it's effective, guys tend to cheat by lowering the angle so it's almost like a flat bench. If you choose to do incline, use strict form and remember to contract your chest; do not rely on your shoulders.

2. Barbell Neck (Barbell Guillotine) Press
Set up the flat bench on the Smith machine for safety and align the bar so it will come down right below your Adam's apple. Begin with light weight and do the movement slowly. Make sure you are not overly externally rotating your shoulders and that you come down as close as you can to your neck without pain.

You'll feel a big stretch across the top of your chest and should get a dramatic feeling of contraction along the clavicle. Remember to concentrate on squeezing your chest. You don't need to lift a ton of weight.

3. Modified Incline Dumbbell Flye
Do this movement on a 45-degree incline bench. Start with your hands supinated at hip level with a moderately light dumbbell in each hand. Arch your back, keep your chest high, and scoop the weights up across the body in a hugging motion until they reach face level. You should feel a contraction in the top of the chest and also in the front deltoid.

This will give you that great chest/deltoid tie-in that everyone wants. Concentrate on the contraction of your chest—not how much weight you can do. For an added burn, follow this movement with normal incline flyes until failure

posted from Bloggeroid

Chad Shaws Awesome WO Technique

Chad Shaw's Amazing WO Technique
 
Warm-up set 1

Use 50% of your 6-rep maximum. Perform 8-10 reps, but don't go to failure! Your aim here is strictly to warm up the muscles and joints.

Warm- up set 2

Use about 75% of your 6-rep maximum. Perform 4-6 reps. Again, don't work to failure.

Working set

Use 100% of your 6-rep maximum. Push yourself to complete muscle failure. It should take about 3 seconds to complete the positive portion (raising the bar) of each rep and 4 seconds to complete the negative portion (lowering the bar) of each rep. Your sixth rep should be extremely hard to complete.

Once you finish that sixth rep and there is no conceivable way to produce one more full-range repetition, perform three partial repetitions by lowering the bar from the contracted position—only about 3-4 inches—and then going back up into the contracted position.

After finishing your third partial rep, hold the bar into the fully contracted position for as long as you can. Fight the resistance until you're unable to any longer, and then resist the bar as it slowly descends into the starting position. If you feel like you can do another set, then you did it wrong

posted from Bloggeroid

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Muscle - All The Formulas You Need

In addition to adequate protein, you need more calories. Use the following formula to calculate the number you need to take in daily to gain 1 pound a week. (Give yourself 2 weeks for results to show up on the bathroom scale.

If you haven't gained by then, increase your calories by 500 a day.)

A. Your weight in pounds.

B. Multiply A by 12 to get your basic calorie needs.

C. Multiply B by 1.6 to estimate your resting metabolic rate (calorie burn without factoring in exercise).

D. Strength training: Multiply the number of minutes you lift weights per week by 5.

E. Aerobic training: Multiply the number of minutes per week that you run, cycle, and play sports by 8.

F. Add D and E, and divide by 7.

G. Add C and F to get your daily calorie needs.

H. Add 500 to G. This is your estimated daily calorie needs to gain 1 pound a week.

posted from Bloggeroid

How much protein? Muscle

Eat Meat

Shoot for about 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight, which is roughly the maximum amount your body can use in a day, according to a landmark study in the Journal of Applied Physiology.

(For example, a 160-pound man should consume 160 grams of protein a day—the amount he'd get from an 8-ounce chicken breast, 1 cup of cottage cheese, a roast-beef sandwich, two eggs, a glass of milk, and 2 ounces of peanuts.)

Split the rest of your daily calories equally between carbohydrates and fats.

posted from Bloggeroid

Muscle - Carbs after Workout

Down Carbs After Your Workout

Research shows that you'll rebuild muscle faster on your rest days if you feed your body carbohydrates. "Post-workout meals with carbs increase your insulin levels," which, in turn, slows the rate of protein breakdown, says Kalman. Have a banana, a sports drink, a peanut-butter sandwich

posted from Bloggeroid