From thread "Just to throw a little spice in the soup"
Okay i hope that's layed out nice and easy to read and look at. I'm starting up a thread, and calling you out Vicious!
I'm going to ask you for some help putting together a routine as above. First i'd like to work on the basics, just a basic routine.
Here's one:
Squats
Deadlifts
Bench
Chins
Clean and Press
Incline Hammer Curls
Overhead DB Tricep Extensions
Calf Raises
Ab work
Okay that's pretty simple and covers all the bases. So we have:
3 weeks of 5's
4 weeks of neg's
For exercises we can't do negatives on, we use cluster reps, correct? So basically keep increasing the weight, but split up the reps into as many sets as needed to get your desired reps (5?).
During the negatives we start loaded stretches. ?? You said last week of 5's at earliest, so i'm assuming it would be more optimal to take it another week later. ??
For metabolic work i'm not really sure what we do.
Wow, this is getting long.
We start are 5's at 2 increments lower at most. Well which one would you suggest, hehe? 1 or 2 increments lower?
Okay i'm going to stop now, i'll wait for your reply oh noble one, and we'll go from there.
From thread "Customizing HST"[b said:Quote[/b] ]I actually agree that an optimal application of HST would probably jettison 15 and 10s altogether. After your 2-week SD, you would go into 3 week period of 5s (longer because there has been no conditioning up to that point), followed by a 4-week period of progressive negatives. In addition, we'd throw in load stretches from the get-go, then rachet up to "pulse-stretches" during the negatives. You decondition 14+ days, and start again.
Of course, training that heavy has its own problems. It can be very hard on the joints. The post-SD DOMS would be severe enough to possibly cause problems with the high frequency progressive load. Not everybody can do negatives (though everybody should ) Finally, you would need to include additional metabolic work anyway in order to faciliate glycogen storage and endurance-related adaptations, both which contribute to protein synthesis as well as future fatigue management.
But, say, I were on a bet with somebody to put on size on a specific bodypart in a short time period. The above is exactly what I would do. Throwing out the 15s and 10s, I'm not interested in overall long-term success. Rather, I'm interested in producing immediate results in a specific area, without regard to 100% safety, without regard to an ideal management of total continuous growth and decondition periods, without regard toward a conservative management of fatigue. It is still HST but a different application of the principles. And it starts to look like Vince's DOMS theory.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Because you're jumping straight to 5s out of SD, you don't get a lot of protection with the joints. Many movements just can't be done as negatives, thus you'll hit the ceiling with them a lot sooner. To compensate, you could use a combination of load cycling and cluster (such as the above example) in order to keep pushing the 5RM ceiling -- and that is great if you want to balance strength gains with hypertrophy -- but you're then still limited by that ceiling. Finally, 10s and most of 15s is still useful for growth. If you could do 8 weeks of 5s and post-5s, you could do 10-11 weeks if you throw in 10s and 15s as well.
It's a judgement call, then. If you prefer the low-rep training, have no connective tissue issues, and can find enough negative-friendly movements, then it's a very attractive alternative to traditional HST.
You'd make your increments more linear and progress less often. The reason you can do that is because, straight of SD, you're going to make a huge jump to about 70-75% of 1RM. That is well, well above your muscle's initial conditioned state, meaning that your muscles will play catch up with you during the 1st week. Thus, during that first week, you can start at a load slightly lower (2 increments at most) than you starting 5s, and then use a linear load increment toward the end of 5s. For the first week and a half, you really don't have to change the weight often. That works out to be roughly 3 weeks.
There are various choices you make with this; a lot of it will be related to exercise selection. Because you're starting straight into 5s, I wouldn't implement loaded stretching until the last week of 5s at the earliest. If you don't have stretch-point movements (the easiest to implement loaded stretching), then you would look into pulse-stretches with the compound movements. Also, you would look into the DC stretches, fascia stretches, and so on. Examples of such are listed earlier in this thread.
Okay i hope that's layed out nice and easy to read and look at. I'm starting up a thread, and calling you out Vicious!

I'm going to ask you for some help putting together a routine as above. First i'd like to work on the basics, just a basic routine.
Here's one:
Squats
Deadlifts
Bench
Chins
Clean and Press
Incline Hammer Curls
Overhead DB Tricep Extensions
Calf Raises
Ab work
Okay that's pretty simple and covers all the bases. So we have:
3 weeks of 5's
4 weeks of neg's
For exercises we can't do negatives on, we use cluster reps, correct? So basically keep increasing the weight, but split up the reps into as many sets as needed to get your desired reps (5?).
During the negatives we start loaded stretches. ?? You said last week of 5's at earliest, so i'm assuming it would be more optimal to take it another week later. ??
For metabolic work i'm not really sure what we do.
Wow, this is getting long.
We start are 5's at 2 increments lower at most. Well which one would you suggest, hehe? 1 or 2 increments lower?
Okay i'm going to stop now, i'll wait for your reply oh noble one, and we'll go from there.