A rep isn't just going through the motions with one arm while you scroll through your phone with the other. Every rep matters. And if you want to get the most out of your training, your goal should be to get the most out of each rep.
The advanced lifter uses a variety of rep types to fit his goals. Here are six you should know and use.
If you're trying to hammer a particular muscle group with more time under tension, use this.
These are great for teaching proper technique and eliminating any potential momentum or compensation during the lift. They'll keep you honest too. Full-stop reps take even the biggest of egos out of the equation.
Not every lift warrants a slow eccentric/negative phase. A max effort deadlift wouldn't be suitable for this. But adding slow eccentrics to create greater tension here and there is a surefire way to reap some noticeable gains. It can improve your form too.
Anywhere between a 4 to 10-second eccentric is usually recommended to maximize muscle growth.
Isometrics are when your muscles are under load and there's no change in length or size of the muscle. Your joint angle doesn't change. Yielding isometrics involve holding a position and resisting the urge to move, like you would during a plank.
Adding pauses to your reps eliminates potential compensation and momentum while creating greater tension in your muscles.
Remember when you stood in the doorway as a kid and pressed your hands against the frame as hard as you could for a few seconds? Then you'd step out and watch your arms float up to your sides?
Trying to move an immovable object is an example of overcoming isometrics. You can do it with just about anything: squats, deadlifts, rows, presses, curls etc.
Note that you don't even need a squat rig to perform overcoming isometrics. Any immovable object will do.
I learned these from Ben Bruno. Elevator reps involve going through two partial range reps before completing the full range of motion.
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