Heavy Duty Weight Training

June 27, 2008 on 3:10 am | In Weight Training Routines, High Intensity Weight Training, Build Muscle | No Comments

  One of the more unique weight training routines is the Heavy Duty routine. It’s an extremely low set, high intensity routine. 1970s bodybuilder Mike Mentzer created Heavy Duty with the belief that most bodybuilders of the time were training way too much - some were doing 3 or 4 hour workouts. He advocated much shorter workouts with a few very high intensity sets per muscle group with plenty of rest to avoid ever overtraining. In his heyday, former Mr. Olympia Dorian Yates used a variation of Heavy Duty.

  A Heavy Duty routine calls for as little as 1 or 2 sets per exercise and only a few exercises per muscle. Every set must be done to failure and possibly even beyond it with forced rep and other high intensity techniques. With the set count so low, only major compound exercises should be done.

  To do a Heavy Duty weight training routine effectively you really need to know your body and have the ability to get a lot out of each and every set you do. It’s not a good idea for a beginner to try Heavy Duty since they are still trying to learn proper exercise form and how their body reacts to weight training. A good time to try Heavy Duty would be when you feel you’ve been overtraining for a while. If your body feels beat up and you weight train almost every day for hours at a time you could give Heavy Duty a try to get more recovery and allow your body to “catch up” and build more muscle and strength.

Building Upper Back Thickness

June 12, 2008 on 11:33 pm | In Weight Training Exercises, Upper Back, Build Muscle | No Comments

  The upper back contains many muscles and if you put them together it makes it the largest muscle group of the body. For many weight trainers it’s a pain to train the upper back since you can’t see the muscles working and all of the exercises for it involv pulling rather than pushing. However, for anyone who wants more overall muscularity and strength building thickness in the upper back must be done. You also don’t want very developed pecs and an average upper back as it may negatively affect your posture.

  The best exercises for building upper back thickness are rows. They can be done many different ways - with barbells, dumbbells, cables, or machines. The good old bent over barbell row is great for thickening the upper back. When you do them you should have your body at around a 45 degree angle to the floor with your lower back arched rather than having your upper body parellel to the floor with your back bent. Focus on contracting the muscles of the upper back for a second or 2 when you pull the barbell to your abdomen area. Another great trick to use on barbell rows is to do them with an underhand grip. This will help you build thicker lats (former Mr. Olympia Dorian Yates used this exercise and he had some of the thickest lat muscles ever seen).

  Another great way to use a barbell for rowing is to do t-bar rows. To do them put a barbell on the floor and load weights on only one end of it, then bend over and put both hands close to the end where the weight is and pull it to your chest/abdomen area. Try it to work the upper back muscles from  different angle.

  Dumbbell rows will allow you to train one side of your upper back at a time. Use a bench to support the side that isn’t lifting and pull the dumbbell from the floor up to the side of your body.

  While free weight rowing is superior for building more upper back thickness, cable rows certainly have their place. You can do them towards the end of an upper back workouts or even use them as your primary rowing exercise if you’ve lifted for a while and have already built up a lot of muscle in your upper back. Rowing on a cable machine will allow you to try different grip ranges to hit the upper back from different angles.

Lower Back Workouts

May 21, 2008 on 12:10 am | In Lower Back, Weight Training Routines, Weight Training Exercises, Build Muscle | No Comments

  Any serious weight trainer needs to perform lower back workouts regularly to avoid injuries and lift more on weight training exercises for other muscles. A weak lower back will negatively affect you on many major exercises, deadlifts and squats in particular. If you don’t have a strong lower back you will also be way more likely to hurt yourself lifting, even if you aren’t using much weight.

  The best weight training exercise to strengthen the lower back muscles is the deadlift. You should always start a lower back workout with them. Good mornings are a rarely used exercise for the lower back but is a good one to do after deadlifting. Hyperextensions should be done for high reps with no or little weight and are a great finisher to a lower back workout.

  Try a workout like this to build muscle and strength in your lower back:

Deadlifts (1 or 2 sets of 12-15 reps on light day, 2 or 3 sets of 8-12 reps on medium day, 3 or 4 sets of 3-8 reps on heavy day)

Good mornings (1 or 2 sets of 15-20 reps on light day, 2 sets of 10-15 reps on medium day, 2 or 3 sets of 5-10 reps on heavy day)

Hyperextensions (1 or 2 sets of 20-30 reps during each lower back workout to finish off with).

  This workout should allow you to strengthen your lower back without overtraining as long as you get enough rest between workouts. You may want to try your deadlift one rep max every now and then on your heavy day to test your strength.

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