IS doing a chest, back and leg day THEN doing a shoulder/bicep/tricep workout the next day overworking the arm muscles??? Any ideas on how to break it up? post your thoughts or questions
IS doing a chest, back and leg day THEN doing a shoulder/bicep/tricep workout the next day overworking the arm muscles??? Any ideas on how to break it up? post your thoughts or questions
good luck with day 1 if your going really heavy. can't imagine that sht...
Chest back leg day would be a fullbodyworkout day. Do chest/tri Back/bi legs/abs and shoulders
[QUOTE=JRCmayne;732085173]IS doing a chest, back and leg day THEN doing a shoulder/bicep/tricep workout the next day overworking the arm muscles??? Any ideas on how to break it up? post your thoughts or questions[/QUOTE]
best way to find out is to try it and see how your body responds to it. I'm running a 3 day routine wt the moment which is:
Day 1: Chest + Back
Day 2: Legs + arms
Day 3: Shoulders, Traps and core*
I just listen to my body and take rest days when i feel i need to.*
[QUOTE=rasse226;732086083]Chest back leg day would be a fullbodyworkout day. Do chest/tri Back/bi legs/abs and shoulders[/QUOTE]
Like day 1:chest, triceps, back, day 2: legs, biceps, abs and shoulders?
[QUOTE=teeeps;732086383]best way to find out is to try it and see how your body responds to it. I'm running a 3 day routine wt the moment which is:
Day 1: Chest + Back
Day 2: Legs + arms
Day 3: Shoulders, Traps and core*
I just listen to my body and take rest days when i feel i need to.*[/QUOTE]
Its intersting you say that last part, cuz im not sure if my gains are coming to a hault because of this new routine that im using. too soon to tell but it MIGHT not be working. i used to do fullbody workouts setup like Fullbody, rest, Fullbody, rest..etc. Then i tried the 3 day split sorta thing and ive gained muscle but i feel like i need to mix it up and setup a more effiecient routine...in terms of what muscles to work on which days. thanks for the opinion
legs+back+biceps
i'm wondering if I should start with back then do legs and then biceps or back biceps legs?
after legs i probably won't be able to stand and do any work so i could do back biceps legs?
opinions on mine?
[QUOTE=jarekd1234;732089413]legs+back+biceps
i'm wondering if I should start with back then do legs and then biceps or back biceps legs?
after legs i probably won't be able to stand and do any work so i could do back biceps legs?
opinions on mine?[/QUOTE]
I always do squats first if its leg day, gets the blood flowing fully and gets me pumped for the rest of the workout. I then finish legs later in the workout and do my arms before them. Doesn't really matter when you do them really you should have enough energy to work other body parts after legs if not then try drinking so pre workout during your workout or a drink high in glucose during your workout
[QUOTE=JRCmayne;732087643]Its intersting you say that last part, cuz im not sure if my gains are coming to a hault because of this new routine that im using. too soon to tell but it MIGHT not be working. i used to do fullbody workouts setup like Fullbody, rest, Fullbody, rest..etc. Then i tried the 3 day split sorta thing and ive gained muscle but i feel like i need to mix it up and setup a more effiecient routine...in terms of what muscles to work on which days. thanks for the opinion[/QUOTE]
you may well have just come to the end of your newb gains which would explain slower level of progression. You'd know if your overtraining you'd feel constantly tired you'd develop aches/pains in your joints, you'd lose some motivation and your muscles would be constantly sore. It unlikely looking at your join date that you'd be able to fully overtrain and overstress your CNS so i'd just stick with that program for a least 8-12 weeks then look at the outcome. Just make sure your getting at least 1 rest day a week possibly two on that sort of program
If you want to go against the grain and do something different, try chest/back on day 1, legs/abs on day 2, and shoulders/tris/bis on day 3. It seems every time I go back to this pattern, I get good results. It's tough but it stops your arms and shoulders from becoming overly fatigued since you have like 3 to 4 days inbetween day 1 and 3 (if you work out every other day). So far, it seems to be helping my lagging arm development.
[QUOTE=teeeps;732092643]you may well have just come to the end of your newb gains which would explain slower level of progression. You'd know if your overtraining you'd feel constantly tired you'd develop aches/pains in your joints, you'd lose some motivation and your muscles would be constantly sore. It unlikely looking at your join date that you'd be able to fully overtrain and overstress your CNS so i'd just stick with that program for a least 8-12 weeks then look at the outcome. Just make sure your getting at least 1 rest day a week possibly two on that sort of program[/QUOTE]
Before, i never used to use a rest day. now i do. Just to clarify, i do Day 1(monday) then day two (tuesday) then day 3 Rest (wednesday) then i repeat this for the rest of the week
[QUOTE=KrazyKrautWop;732092993]If you want to go against the grain and do something different, try chest/back on day 1, legs/abs on day 2, and shoulders/tris/bis on day 3. It seems every time I go back to this pattern, I get good results. It's tough but it stops your arms and shoulders from becoming overly fatigued since you have like 3 to 4 days inbetween day 1 and 3 (if you work out every other day). So far, it seems to be helping my lagging arm development.[/QUOTE]
ill try it out. thanks man
What you are doing is similar (not quite) to a push/pull. Perhaps try a push/pull (organize muscles that push during the movement into the same day and muscles that pull during the movement into the same day) or an upper/lower using the following workout days:
day 1: push
day 2: pull
day 3: off
day 4: push
day 5: pull
day 6: off
day 7: off
same thing for upper lower, just subtitute push for upper and pull for lower.
PS: quads and calves are push, hamstrings are pull.
[QUOTE=m4ttarama;732102083]What you are doing is similar (not quite) to a push/pull. Perhaps try a push/pull (organize muscles that push during the movement into the same day and muscles that pull during the movement into the same day) or an upper/lower using the following workout days:
day 1: push
day 2: pull
day 3: off
day 4: push
day 5: pull
day 6: off
day 7: off
same thing for upper lower, just subtitute push for upper and pull for lower.
PS: quads and calves are push, hamstrings are pull.[/QUOTE]
What are some examples of the "push" muscles? sorry, this is a first ive heard about this routine haha
[QUOTE=JRCmayne;732104493]What are some examples of the "push" muscles? sorry, this is a first ive heard about this routine haha[/QUOTE]
Push: Chest, Shoulders, Triceps, Quadriceps, Calves
Pull: Back, Traps, Biceps, Hamstrings, Abs
[QUOTE=JRCmayne;732104493]What are some examples of the "push" muscles? sorry, this is a first ive heard about this routine haha[/QUOTE]
i can't see anything wrong with your current routine assuming your not doing too much volume per session. But push pull is also a very good program, basically push days are primarily push movemnts so chest, shoulders, triceps, quads and calves. Pull day revolves around hamstrings, abs, traps, lats, mid back and biceps
[QUOTE=teeeps;732113473]i can't see anything wrong with your current routine assuming your not doing too much volume per session. But push pull is also a very good program, basically push days are primarily push movemnts so chest, shoulders, triceps, quads and calves. Pull day revolves around hamstrings, abs, traps, lats, mid back and biceps[/QUOTE]
got it. thanks bros. ill make a routine sheet and post it soon and let me know what you think.
[QUOTE=m4ttarama;732112193]Push: Chest, Shoulders, Triceps, Quadriceps, Calves
Pull: Back, Traps, Biceps, Hamstrings, Abs[/QUOTE]
What would a typical workout look like for this? How many sets/excersices per bodypart?