Let's say your Target reps for a given isolation exercise is 12 reps.
When going through it, do you decide to drop the weight and stay close to the 12 reps? Or stay at the weight you chose, All are trained very close to failure (3 RIR)
Which do you often do?
A: Stay at your target weight even if it drops below your target reps by a lot, Goal is to get stronger AT that given weight (Perhaps Drop the weight if you fall too far)
Set 1: 22.5 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 2: 22.5 x 9 (3 RIR)
Set 3: 22.5 x 6 (3 RIR)
Set 4: 22.5 x 5 (3 RIR)
Total Volume 697kg
B: Drop the weight if you know you're not going to be close to your target reps, You try and remain Close to the target reps even if that means dropping the weight.
Set 1: 22.5 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 2: 20 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 3: 20 x 9 (3 RIR)
Set 4: 20 x 7 (3 RIR)
Total Volume 787kg
C: Stay at your target weight but do a quick drop set to make up the volume and fatigue.
Set 1: 22.5 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 2: 22.5 x 9 (3 RIR)
Dropset: 17.5 x 5 (3 RIR)
Set 3: 22.5 x 6 (3 RIR)
Dropset: 17.5 x 4 (3 RIR)
Set 4: 22.5 x 5 (3 RIR)
Dropset: 15 x 5 (3 RIR)
D: Drop the weight if you know you're not going to be close to your target reps and just add a set to make up for lost volume (You remain Closer to the target reps and keep the volume up)
Set 1: 22.5 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 2: 20 x 11 (3 RIR)
Set 3: 20 x 9 (3 RIR)
Set 4: 20 x 7 (3 RIR)
Add Set 5: 20 x 6 (3 RIR)
Total Volume 907kg
E: Other
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09-20-2022, 12:32 PM #1
How do you enforce Progressive overload when doing your isolations?
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09-20-2022, 12:41 PM #2
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09-20-2022, 12:42 PM #3
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09-20-2022, 01:08 PM #4
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09-20-2022, 01:44 PM #5
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09-20-2022, 01:52 PM #6
With plates I usually keep the weight the same and in a range where I can hit or get close to 10 reps on all my sets. When that becomes too easy I bump the weight up.
For machines I often stick with strategy above, but will sometimes do drop sets with a structure of - hit 10 heavy reps, drop weight to where I can hit 10 more without resting, drop again and hit 10 more without resting and count that as “one” set.+positive crew+
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09-20-2022, 02:54 PM #7
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It comes naturally..
When it does.
Then you do more.
Its that simple
Forcing anything is just asking to over reach and stall.
Progressive overload is the DISPLAY of progress, not what 'enforces' it.. Its organic and comes when you have done the work for it.FMH crew - Couch.
'pick a program from the stickies' = biggest cop out post.
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09-20-2022, 03:48 PM #8"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. "By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another."
Old Guy deadlifting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zMrim-0Dks
bench press https://youtu.be/GaRzfueJVJQ
Every workout is GAME DAY!
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09-21-2022, 08:57 AM #9
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09-21-2022, 09:06 AM #10
The general goal of resistance training is overload. You need a certain amount of weight, reps and sets to achieve this. As your body adapts, that amount becomes insufficient and you need to increase one or more of those parameters to achieve the same level off overload. That's progressive overload.
Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth?
Galatians 4:16
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09-21-2022, 09:30 AM #11
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09-21-2022, 09:47 AM #12
Getting stronger = more weight or more reps or more sets
{Leaving aside better form, faster concentric, slower eccentric.}
All three imply getting to another RIR
100x10 > 105x10 so RIR2>RIR1
100x8 > 100x9 so RIR2>RIR1
"The effect not the cause" - you mean repeating a movement for a longer time without changing anything and hoping that RIR3 will become RIR4 and then basically a warmup set?I like to learn from the mistakes of the people who take my advice.
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09-21-2022, 09:53 AM #13
- Join Date: Jan 2015
- Location: United Kingdom (Great Britain)
- Posts: 7,677
- Rep Power: 61357
That is essentially a the effect of 'doing the right dose of training' indeed. You added muscle and got stronger.
Or its daily fluctuations
Doesn't mean you can't change variables of course.
Some times you have to to line the dose up with your capability - which in essence is exactly what we are aiming for.
Adding weigh or reps and it been harder isn't actually progressive overload, that is not akin to arbitrary progression of load. That's periodisation to try to illicit the right dose for the adaptations.
Tldr.
Adding weight/reps doesn't cause adaptations
Adaptations let you increase load/repsFMH crew - Couch.
'pick a program from the stickies' = biggest cop out post.
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09-21-2022, 11:07 AM #14
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09-21-2022, 11:19 AM #15
Just want to point out the obvious - progressive overload isn't necessarily something that can or should be measured based upon 1 exercise.
The weight and reps you're performing can stay the same on a specific exercise (or even drop) and you still may be making progress. How? It may be as simple as that the exercise/s performed earlier in the workout required more effort than they had previously. There are many other factors as well.
Now to answer the question in the OP - I've done all of these. My personal opinion is that it makes very little difference which approach is taken.The Flywheel Effect - http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=172103043
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09-21-2022, 06:18 PM #16
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09-22-2022, 12:32 AM #17
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That is true, especially since accessories are usually done on the same day and after main compounds - so fatigue plays a big factor. It's way more influenced by how hard you hit the earlier exercises than by a progression over time. If you do them on a different day then maybe performance would indicate something useful.
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09-22-2022, 01:13 AM #18
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09-22-2022, 07:30 AM #19
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09-23-2022, 05:31 AM #20
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Honestly 'overload' in the name is very deceiving for what happens.
Id argue that in its self causes more problems than it solves.
You arent really overloading anything, your just working within your current abilities. Overload implies you are doing more than you are capable of.FMH crew - Couch.
'pick a program from the stickies' = biggest cop out post.
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09-24-2022, 11:19 AM #21
Surely it means doing more than your body is accustomed too or has done before.
For example, if I squat 85 kg for 3x10, then next week I manage 90 kg for 3x10, that is overload because it is more than my body has done before, and AIUI that overload is what stimulates adaptation in the form of increased muscle mass. Alternatively I could keep the weight the same and increase the number of sets or reps which is another form of overload.
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09-24-2022, 11:23 AM #22
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09-24-2022, 11:23 AM #23
I can relate to this. When I was trying Steve Shaw's rep goal method of progressive overload, I would squat on each set until I slowed right down around the sticking point, and I thought that failure was imminent. At one point I got to that stage and for curiosity tried one more rep and I managed it ok, and sometimes have managed another one as well. I now know when I start to slow significantly I can crank one or two more out without reaching true failure or form going downhill.
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09-24-2022, 11:26 AM #24
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09-24-2022, 11:35 AM #25
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09-24-2022, 12:18 PM #26
To reiterate the point that was made by several people earlier, which I think is spot on, progressive overload is something that manifests as a result of getting stronger.
It's not that you force yourself to do more than you were able to do previously, and THAT makes you stronger.
You can always only do what you're capable of doing, and you can never do more than that.
If you really think about it, that wouldn't even make sense.
Progressive overload is a RESULT of getting stronger, not a cause.
The phrase is poorly used most of the time, which is what causes a lot of this confusion.
We're often told to apply progressive overload.
What we should be told is to add weight/reps/sets as our capability of doing so increases.The Flywheel Effect - http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=172103043
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09-24-2022, 12:41 PM #27
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09-24-2022, 01:11 PM #28
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09-24-2022, 01:32 PM #29
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09-24-2022, 01:44 PM #30
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And this is why it's a deceiving phrase...
It makes people think this.
Got that backwards still.
Doing more to 'overload' the body doesn't create the adaptations... Being able to do more is the result of doing the appropriate dose of training
- which very frequently is NOT more than you did before.FMH crew - Couch.
'pick a program from the stickies' = biggest cop out post.
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