The Strength and Power Workout Thread

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  • Nitro Express
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Aug 2004
    • 32942

    #46
    I like to work out on free weights better than machines. I belong to a gym that has IVANKO weights and bars and I meet some friends there and we work out together because with free weights you need a spotter. I think you get a better overall workout with free weights than machines because you have to stabilize the weight. I've been working out in gyms my whole life. The problem I have trying to work out at home is the lack of room and the equipment just isn't as good. What I have at home is a rowing machine and some dumb bells. But I socialize at the gym and my whole family goes there. So really it's more of a local rec center than it is a gym. Everyone there is really nice.

    I sat down with a trainer and put together a computer program for my workout. I just go to the gym and print out that days workout and do the weights and lifts for that day. It's really nice. Right now I'm doing more of an endurance workout with more reps.
    Last edited by Nitro Express; 11-29-2012, 06:12 PM.
    No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

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    • Dave's Bitch
      ROCKSTAR

      • Apr 2005
      • 5293

      #47
      Originally posted by vandeleur
      Db do you find it tough to motivate your self at home ? Is there not to many distractions .
      Nah I enjoy my workouts.I do struggle a little when the schools are out to fit all my cardio in because I do 60 minuets 3 times a week(Sometimes 90 If I have had a diet slip) and I do light weight's and crunches and stuff like that between.When I'm at home If I am not doing house work I am listening to music so there really is not that much else to be doing.If I'm unwell i don't mind missing a few workouts but If not I feel bad if I don't do it
      I really love you baby, I love what you've got
      Let's get together we can, Get hot

      Comment

      • BigBadBrian
        TOASTMASTER GENERAL
        • Jan 2004
        • 10625

        #48
        A Tried and True Bodybuilding Program Template

        T-Nation Link

        In my last two-part article series, I described my 11 principles for bodybuilding training. Now, I want to make things even simpler for you.

        I'm now going to provide you with a couple of plug-n-play – make that plug-n-train – templates that you can use to quickly and easily design a slew of great, no-nonsense training programs.

        Since I generally recommend training four or five days per week, I'll include both a four-way training split and a five-way split. That way you'll be covered either way.

        As with my 11 bodybuilding training principles, I encourage you to use these templates either as-is, or as a base upon which you can build your own training program.


        Be Flexible
        "I am a man of fixed and unbending principles, the first of which is to be flexible at all times."
        – Everett Dirksen

        Nothing in these templates or the following exercise options is set in stone. For example, you may already have huge calves. If you happen to be so lucky, then you may want to opt to do no calf exercises at all.

        Or you may be a recreational Mixed Martial Artist who needs to work on grip strength. Thus you'll want to add grip/forearm exercises to the templates below.

        Whatever the case, just remember that while bodybuilding training is definitely a science, it's just as much an art – and even though you and I use the same science, your art may very well look different from my art.


        Be Rigid


        "Life is indeed terribly complicated–to a man who has lost his principles."
        – G.K. Chesterton

        Although creative flexibility is welcomed, don't get carried away. Whether you use my 11 bodybuilding training principles (which are built into the following templates) or your own, you should definitely have some parameters to guide your decision-making, otherwise it's easy to venture too far from the tried and true.

        For example, if you've ever seen a leg workout that consisted of 3 sets each of leg extensions, leg press, and leg curls, you've seen a lack of training principles in action.


        Rest Intervals
        The topic of rest intervals is a perfect illustration of the need to be flexible and rigid at the same time.

        While walking around in the touristy part of San Francisco the other day, I saw a shirt that said, "Some say I have ADD, but they just don't underst....Hey, LOOK, a Squirrel!"

        If your friends would say that shirt applies to you (or you already own said shirt), then you may very well get bored between sets, especially when you're focusing on strength and need to get copious rest between sets. In that case, you need to be more rigid, getting at least the minimum amount of rest prescribed between sets.

        On the other hand, it's important to be flexible regarding your rest intervals between sets – at least flexible enough to allow common sense to prevail.

        For example, if a workout calls for you to only rest 30 seconds between sets, yet your breaths per minute and the beats per minute of your heart haven't even begun to slow, then it's time to be flexible and use some common sense – take more rest.

        With that said, here are the rest intervals that you should adhere to, unless you have a good reason not to – and getting bored isn't a reason!

        Short rest: 20-60 seconds (45 seconds on average)
        Moderate rest: 1-2 minutes (90 seconds on average)
        Long rest: 2-5 minutes (3 minutes on average)
        Besides implementing a rest period that aligns with your goal of doing a given exercise (which I've done for you with the following template), the other thing to remember is to be consistent with your rest intervals. Otherwise, your performance will be inconsistent and impossible to monitor.


        Sets & Reps
        As a rule, we could say there are three general rep/weight ranges:

        Low Rep / Heavy Weight: 1-6 reps (5 reps on average)
        Moderate Rep / Moderate Weight: 7-12 reps (10 reps on average)
        High Rep / Light Weight: > 12 reps (15 reps on average)

        But I point out the above ranges more for illustration, as we're not going to stick precisely to those.

        In the templates I'll lay out the exact sets and reps I'd typically recommend for that particular exercise, but don't get too hung up on being 100% consistent with what I've laid out. Instead, use them as a guideline to know what 'ballpark' to stay in.

        For example, I may say do 5 x 5 (five sets of five reps), but instead you'd like to do 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. That's totally fine – you're still in the same heavy weight/low-rep 'ballpark' so-to-speak.

        On the other hand, if I prescribe 3 x 6-10 and you instead do 3 x 12-15, then you're changing things a bit too much and essentially creating your own training template. Again, that's fine, but just make sure you have a legitimate reason to tweak things that much.


        When In Doubt


        When in doubt as to whether to stick to the plug-n-train template I've laid out or to tweak it, I'd highly encourage you to stick with the template as is.

        After all, I'm putting in (literally) over 20 years of trial-and-error experience and the same amount of book learning into these templates – so, to say I'm confident the following templates work would be a serious understatement.

        So my rule regarding tweaking the following templates is the same as Mrs. Mathews' (my eighth-grade English teacher) rule regarding comma use – when in doubt, don't.


        Exercise Selection
        It would be impossible for me to list every possible exercise for each body part. Instead, I'm going to list what I'd call the "No-Nonsense" exercises for each body part.

        (FYI, when designing workouts for myself or clients, I rarely feel the need to venture outside of these.)

        Although you've probably got some good, unique exercises up your sleeve, resist the temptation to use too many 'fancy' new exercises or machines. Otherwise you'll stray too far away from the meat and potatoes exercises, which happen to be the ones that we know work!


        Primary and Secondary Exercises
        To systemize everything, I'm dividing exercises into primary (1°) and secondary (2°) exercises.

        Generally, primary exercises will be compound, multi-joint exercises, while secondary exercises tend to be more isolation movements. However, I've based this division on more than compound versus isolation.

        Take dips for example. They're undoubtedly a compound exercise, yet I'd still consider dips secondary in terms of chest exercises.

        Make no mistake, there will be times when you'll want to implement a secondary exercise in place of a primary one. Maybe you want to pre-exhaust your lats with pullovers, for example.

        A more likely exchange would be doing another primary exercise where I've listed a secondary exercise.

        For example, you may opt to do skull crushers – a primary exercise for triceps – last in your triceps routine. Nothing wrong with that.

        Although this primary versus secondary thing is flexible, be more hesitant to swap a primary exercise for a secondary exercise than vice versa – otherwise your routine might not contain enough tough exercises that are easy to loathe yet highly effective, like barbell squats.

        Without further ado, let's get into the specific exercises for each body part.

        Chest
        1° Chest Exercises
        Incline Press (barbell or dumbbell)
        Flat Press (barbell or dumbbell)
        Decline Press (barbell or dumbbell)

        2° Chest Exercises
        Cable Fly/Crossover (high-to-low, low-to-high)
        Dumbbell Fly (incline, flat, or decline)
        Dip
        Machine Press (incline, flat, or decline)
        Machine Fly
        Push-Up

        Back


        1° Back Exercises
        Deadlift (full or rack)
        Barbell Row (overhand or underhand)
        Pull-Up / Chin-Up
        One-Arm Dumbbell Row
        T-Bar Row

        2° Back Exercises
        Cable Row (neutral, overhand, or underhand grip)
        Reverse Fly (dumbbell/machine)
        Dumbbell Pullover
        Pulldown (neutral, overhand, or underhand grip)
        Row Machine
        Pulldown Machine

        Shoulders
        1° Shoulder Exercises
        Overhead Press (barbell or dumbbell)
        Dumbbell Lateral Raise

        2° Shoulder Exercises
        Arnold Press
        Overhead Press Machine
        Cable Lateral
        Front Raise – (barbell or dumbbell)
        Rear-Delt Cable Kickback
        Rear-Delt Dumbbell Raise/Extension
        Truck Driver
        Upright Row – (barbell, dumbbell or cable)

        Triceps


        1° Triceps Exercises
        Skull Crusher
        Close-Grip Bench Press
        Dip
        V-Bar Cable Pushdown

        2° Triceps Exercises
        Kickback (dumbbell or cable)
        Randy Press
        Straight-Bar/Rope Cable Pushdown
        Overhead Extension (barbell, dumbbell, or cable)
        Reverse-Grip Cable Pushdown

        Biceps
        1° Biceps Exercises
        Barbell Curl – (straight or EZ/cambered bar)
        Standing Alternating Dumbbell Curl

        2° Biceps
        Spider Curl
        Drag Curl
        Low-Cable Curl
        Preacher Curl (EZ bar or dumbbell)
        Dumbbell Hammer Curl
        Reverse Curl
        Dumbbell Concentration Curl
        Chin-Up

        Abdominals
        1° Ab Exercises
        Hanging Leg Raise
        Bicycle Crunch
        Decline Crunch

        2° Ab Exercises
        Rope Crunch
        Reverse Crunch
        Frog Kick
        V-Up

        Quadriceps
        1° Quad Exercises
        Back Squat
        Front Squat
        Hack Squat

        2° Quad Exercises
        Bulgarian Split Squat
        Leg Press
        Leg Extension
        Walking Lunge

        Hamstrings
        1° Hamstring Exercises
        Stiff-Legged/Romanian Deadlift (barbell or dumbbell)
        Seated Leg Curl

        2° Hamstring Exercises
        Lying Leg Curl
        Hamstring Ball Roll
        Unilateral (machine) Leg Curl
        Hamstring Rope Pull-Through

        Calves
        1° Calf Exercises
        Standing Calf Raise (machine)
        Unilateral Dumbbell Calf Raise

        2° Calf Exercises
        Calf Press (on leg press)
        Seated Calf Raise


        Training Split Templates
        My goal in creating these templates is to completely take the guesswork out of designing your own training programs. That way you can use your precious energy for training instead of thinking.

        Simply plug-in the appropriate exercise and you're off!


        4-Day Training Split


        The following 4-day training split is, as you likely surmised, for those of you who are going to train four days per week.

        Notice I didn't say "might train four days per week" or "will often train four days per week."

        It's important that you decide, in advance, how many days per week you can commit to. Otherwise you're going to compromise the effectiveness of the program. So if you're thinking, "I can consistently train four or five days per week," then go with four, because it needs to be something doable week in and week out.

        Note: Sure, we can design training splits that are more flexible in nature, allowing you to train on a more random schedule, but that's a topic for another article.

        No-Nonsense 4-Day Training Split
        Day 1 (e.g., Monday) – Chest & Biceps
        Day 2 (e.g., Tuesday) – Back & Abs
        Day 3 (e.g., Thursday) – Shoulders, Triceps, & Abs
        Day 4 (e.g., Friday) – Legs

        Chest & Biceps
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Chest (press) 5 5 Long
        B 1°/2° Chest 3 6-10 Moderate
        C 2° Chest 4 12-20 Short
        D 1° Biceps 4 5 Long
        E 1°/2° Biceps 3 8-12 Moderate
        F 2° Biceps/Forearm 3 10-15 Short/Moderate

        Back & Abs
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Back (vertical pull) 4 6-10 Long
        B 1° Back (lift/row) 3-4 6-10 Long
        C 1°/2° Back 3 8-12 Moderate
        D 2° Back 4 10-15 Short
        E 1° Ab 3-4 6-10 Moderate
        F 2° Ab 3 10-20 Short/Moderate

        Shoulders, Triceps, & Abs
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Shoulder (vertical press) 4 5 Long
        B 1° Shoulder (abduction) 4 8-12 Moderate
        C 2° Shoulder 3 10-15 Short
        D 1° Triceps 3 6-10 Moderate
        E 1°/2° Triceps 3 8-12 Moderate
        F 2° Triceps 3 10-15 (up to 20) Short
        G 1° Ab 4 6-12 Moderate
        Quads, Hams, & Calves
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Quad 5 6-12 Long
        B 2° Quad 4 8-15 Moderate
        C 1° Ham 4 6-10 Moderate
        D 2° Ham 3-4 8-15 Short/Moderate
        E Ancillary Leg (as needed) 2-3 8-15 Short/Moderate
        F 1° Calf 4-5 6-12 Moderate
        G 2° Calf 3 10-15 Short

        5-Day Training Splits


        For those who can commit to training five days per week, this is a great training split.

        Note: If you're a bit savvy, you can reconfigure the following template to use with a different 5-day training split.

        No-Nonsense 5-Day Training Split
        Day 1 (e.g., Monday) – Chest & Calves
        Day 2 (e.g., Tuesday) – Back & Abs
        Day 3 (e.g., Thursday) – Shoulders & Hams
        Day 4 (e.g., Friday) – Quads & Abs
        Day 5 (e.g., Saturday) – Arms


        Chest & Calves
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Chest 5 5 Long
        B 1° Chest 3-4 6-10 Long/Moderate
        C 2° Chest 3 8-12 Moderate/Short
        D 2° Chest (weak point isolation) 3 10-15 Short
        E 1° Calf 4 5-10 Moderate
        F 1° Calf 3 10-15 Short/Moderate
        G 2° Calf 3 12-20 Short


        Back & Abs
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Back (vertical pull) 3-4 6-10 Moderate/Long
        B 1° Back (lift/row) 3-4 4-8 Long
        C 1°/2° Back 3 8-12 Moderate
        D 2° Back 3 8-12 Moderate
        E 2° Back (weak point isolation) 4 10-15 Short/Moderate
        F 1° Ab 3-4 6-12 Moderate
        G 2° Ab 3 12-20 Short


        Shoulders & Hamstrings
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Shoulder (press) 4 4-8 Long
        B 1° Shoulder (abduction) 4 6-10 Moderate
        C 2° Shoulder 3 8-12 Short/Moderate
        D Shoulder Health (i.e., ext rotation) 3 12-15 Short
        E 1° Ham (knee flexion) 3-4 6-10 Moderate
        F 1° Ham (hip ext) 2-3 6-10 Moderate
        G 2° Ham 3-4 10-15 Short/Moderate


        Quads & Abs
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Quad 5 6-10 Long
        B 1°/2° Quad 4 8-12 Moderate/Long
        C 2° Quad 3-4 8-12 Moderate
        D 2° Quad 3 10-20 Short/Moderate
        E 1° Ab 3 6-12 Moderate
        F 2° Ab 3 12-20 Short


        Biceps, Triceps, & Forearms
        Exercise Sets Reps Rest Interval
        A 1° Triceps 4 4-8 Moderate/Long
        B 1° Biceps 4 4-8 Moderate/Long
        C 1°/2° Triceps 3 8-12 Moderate
        D 2° Triceps 3 12-20 Short
        E 1°/2° Biceps 3 8-12 Moderate
        F 2° Biceps 3 12-20 Short
        G Forearms (as needed) 3 8-15 Short/Moderate

        Ancillary Exercises to Consider
        Here are some smaller/more specific body parts that you may want to give some attention, along with the exercises to accomplish that task.

        As needed, simply plug these into your split where they fit best, as illustrated above with the ancillary leg, forearm, and shoulder health exercises.

        Tibialis Anterior
        Resisted Dorsiflexion
        Heel Walking

        Forearm Wrist
        Curls/Flexion (Barbell or Dumbbell)
        Wrist Extension (Barbell or Dumbbell)
        Wrist Rolls
        Reverse Curls

        Shoulder External Rotation
        Cuban Rotation
        Side-Lying DB External Rotation
        Cable External Rotation

        Ancillary Exercises
        Target Muscle Sets Reps Rest Interval
        Tibialis Anterior 4 8-15 Short-Moderate
        Wrist Extensor 4 8-15 Short-Moderate
        Wrist Flexor 3 8-15 Short-Moderate
        Shoulder External Rotation 4 8-15 Short-Moderate

        In Closing
        I'll be the first to admit, there's nothing revolutionary in this article, but that's sort of the point – we're not trying to reinvent bodybuilding training here.

        Instead, these templates are meant to be something more like elegantly simple, yet extremely effective.

        With that in mind, I'd encourage you to print them out and take 'em to the gym with you. That way, you'll always have the information you need to construct a badass training program on the spot.

        Enjoy!
        “If bullshit was currency, Joe Biden would be a billionaire.” - George W. Bush

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