twindeltatandem
New Member
I"m a little surprised how hard the 5s are. I've done various strength programs involving sets of 5, and I know how hard linear progression can get prior to stalling. But I based all my 5RMs off my proven 10RMs. Usually the models are within a few pounds, but man! I'm dropping my estimated 5RMs for DLs and squats down by several increments going forward. Hopefully this isn't just overtraining--I don't think it is. It's not sleep-related, I've been having great sleep. If anything, it's diet-related. I am pretty happy with squatting 245 for 5.
Third day of 5s this afternoon. We'll see how it goes.
If I've got a criticism of the HST vanilla program, it is that the 5s are largely unmanageable from a volume perspective. In my opinion, a heavy working set of 5 reps should be preceeded by at least 3 progressively heavy warm-up sets. Not necessary for accessory lifts, perhaps, but if you're doing full-body lifts you'll end up with at least six total sets on DLs, squats, BP and Press. That's going to put you pretty close to running up against the clock if you do it right, and if you're really going heavy. Also, as I did on the squats last time, I'd really like to do a drop set after the final working set for max (but not to failure) reps.
Last workout I skipped curls for this reason. I think that makes sense, and going forward as the weights get heavier I'll consider anything past the press to be contingent upon keeping the whole workout under an hour. Don't know if I can bring myself to skip dips, but curls and crunches can definitely take a vacation for the next few weeks.
Third day of 5s this afternoon. We'll see how it goes.
If I've got a criticism of the HST vanilla program, it is that the 5s are largely unmanageable from a volume perspective. In my opinion, a heavy working set of 5 reps should be preceeded by at least 3 progressively heavy warm-up sets. Not necessary for accessory lifts, perhaps, but if you're doing full-body lifts you'll end up with at least six total sets on DLs, squats, BP and Press. That's going to put you pretty close to running up against the clock if you do it right, and if you're really going heavy. Also, as I did on the squats last time, I'd really like to do a drop set after the final working set for max (but not to failure) reps.
Last workout I skipped curls for this reason. I think that makes sense, and going forward as the weights get heavier I'll consider anything past the press to be contingent upon keeping the whole workout under an hour. Don't know if I can bring myself to skip dips, but curls and crunches can definitely take a vacation for the next few weeks.
Last edited: