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Strongarm tactics?

WEEK 1: REVERSE PRE-EXHAUSTION CYCLE
Extremely slow chin up, 1 repetition only, immediately followed by
Biceps curls with barbell
Rest briefly.
Extremely slow dip, 1 repetition only, immediately followed by
Triceps extensions with one dumbbell.
Extremely slow chin, 1 repetition only: The objective is to make a single repetition as intense and slow as possible, while still being able to complete it. From a hanging, underhand position — arms fully extended — take as long as possible to get your chin over the bar.
Try to move an inch and hold, another inch and hold, and so on. Remain in each position briefly (without lowering) and move up very deliberately until your chin is over the bar and your upper chest touches it.
Have an assistant who has a watch with a second hand call out your time in seconds (5, 10, 15, 20) as the exercise progresses. Once you've achieved the top position, lower yourself in exactly the same manner. Again, your assistant should note your time in seconds.
If your grip is a problem, cut out a couple of thin rubber-foam pads and place them between your palms and the bar. Doing so will help your gripping power. Also, make sure the horizontal bar you're holding on to is stationary. It's not to your advantage for it to move, rotate, or revolve.
Begin this movement with a goal of 30 seconds positive (pulling yourself up) and 30 seconds negative (lowering). If successful, add 5 seconds to both phases in your next workout.
Note: Only a handful of bodybuilders have ever been able to achieve 60-seconds up and 60-seconds down.
At the completion of your one rep, move quickly to the biceps curl.
Biceps curls with barbell: This is a standing barbell curl performed strictly. To be conservative, lower your normal curling resistance by at least 20 percent. Grab the barbell with your palms up and your hands shoulder-width apart. Stand erect. While keeping your body straight, smoothly curl the barbell.
Slowly lower the weight while keeping your elbows stable. Try to keep the speed at approximately 2 seconds on the positive and 2 seconds on the negative.
Don't pause at the bottom. Begin the next repetition immediately. Repeat for maximum repetitions in the 8 to 12 range. Focus on getting one more repetition, even when it looks like you won't succeed. Accept the pain...and then ignore it. Do the next rep. Most people quit when in fact they have one or two reps left in them.

Get a quick drink of water and ready yourself for the extremely slow dip.
Extremely slow dip, 1 repetition only: The 1-repetition dip is performed in a similar fashion to the 1-repetition chin up. Start the dip in the bottom, stretched position. Move up an inch and hold, another inch and hold, and so on. Take 30 to 40 seconds to push to the top and an equal amount of time to lower yourself.
Your training partner should make sure he paces you appropriately by calling out your raising and lowering times in seconds. Don't shoot past any of those 1-inch ranges. Ease gradually into and out of each small part. After the last few seconds of lowering, step down, pick up a properly loaded dumbbell (35 or 40 pounds may be enough), and start doing the triceps extensions.
Triceps extensions with one dumbbell: Grab a single dumbbell at one end with both hands and press it overhead. Keep your elbows close to your ears as you slowly lower the dumbbell behind your head. Keep your upper arms vertical; only your forearms and hands should move. Extend the dumbbell smoothly back to the top position. Repeat until you reach muscular failure, always remembering to try for 1 more repetition. Focus on the triceps pain... and tolerate it.


Note: One key to this first cycle is moving quickly between the two biceps exercises and between the two triceps exercises. If you rest as long as 3 to 4 seconds between the pairings, you're limiting growth stimulation. Make it a point to NOT REST from one to the other.

WEEK 2: DOUBLE PRE-EXHAUSTION CYCLE

In week 2 you'll be adding a third exercise — the negative-only chin and the negative-only dip. You better have your act together to transition correctly through this series.
Extremely slow chin up, 1 repetition only, immediately followed by
Biceps curls with barbell, immediately followed by
Chin up, negative only.
Rest briefly.
Extremely slow dip, 1 repetition only, immediately followed by
Triceps extensions with one dumbbell, immediately followed by
Dip, negative only.
Extremely slow chin, 1 repetition only: This is the same exercise that you did in week 1, except now you should be stronger and able to last longer. How about trying at least45-secondsupand 45-seconds down? It's imperative that you spend as much time on the negative as you do on the positive. It helps to have a training partner call out your time in seconds.
Biceps curls with barbell: Start curling immediately. Keep the movement as strict as possible and go to failure, which should occur between 8 and 12 repetitions.
Chin, negative only: You'll need a chair, stool, or some steps placed under the chinning bar. You'll be pushing yourself up with your legs and lowering slowly with your arms only.
Can you do an 8-second, negative-only repetition with 40 pounds attached to your waist? How about a second repetition, then a third? Eight repetitions is your goal, with or without the added resistance. (You can also use a combination of both — as many reps as you can manage with the weighted belt, get out of the belt, then a few more with just your body weight.)

Shake your arms a bit, hydrate your mouth, and jump back into the cycle.
Extremely slow dip, 1 repetition only: Just like week 1, except now you've improved. Try to take at least 45 seconds going up and the same amount of time fighting your way down.
Triceps extension with one dumbbell: Grab a dumbbell at one end with both hands and let your triceps do their thing. Burn 'em out as best you can for 8 to 12 reps.
Dip, negative only: You'll also need a chair, a box, or steps to assist you in getting into the top position of the dip, preferably with some resistance attached to a weight belt. Once there, begin the deliberate lowering process. Make up your mind that your somewhat rested chest and shoulder muscles can be called into action to force your triceps simply to do more work — more work than they've done previously. Knock them out for 8 to 12 repetitions. It really helps if you can relax your face and neck on the way down.


From the top position, bend your elbows and lower your body under control while resisting the movement with your triceps. Remember, the concept is... legs up fast, triceps down slow.
Note: Once again, it's very important to take LITTLE OR NO REST between the three biceps and the three triceps exercises. I know you've got to get into a weighted belt on the negative chins and dips – just do it in haste. And I know that you'll be breathing like an old-fashioned freight train, before and during those chins and dips. Hey, I told you up front that these cycles were going to challenge your manhood. That's what it takes to stimulate muscular growth... quickly.

THE NECESSARY STEPS:

To be a part of The BIGGER ARMS Challenge, you need to take the following steps:
1. Make a commitment. Tell me that you want to be involved by submitting a post at the end of this article. Include your age, height, weight, and BEFORE arm size (see #4 below).
Editor's Note: Some of you may be tempted to do the challenge without signing up. Don't. C'mon, let's do this together and compare results! Besides, if you do it and post your before and after pics, we'll send you an exclusive T-Nation baseball cap.
2. Have a friend with a digital camera take before-and-after shots of your contracted arms in a double-biceps pose. Try to standardize the photos: same background, angle and distance from camera, and time of day. At the end of the plan, consider emailing me your comparison photos. If you don't want to be recognized, wear dark glasses, do the photos from the backside, or crop out your head.
3. Agree to train your biceps and triceps, according to the outlined directions, four times over a two-week period.
4. Take a careful set of BEFORE circumference measurements of your upper arms in the following manner: Locate a thin plastic tape. Have a training partner take your unpumped measurement prior to training. Stand and contract your right biceps. Your upper arm should be parallel to the floor. Have your buddy pass the tape around the largest part of the biceps with the tape perpendicular to the upper-arm bone. The tape should be taut but not tight. Record the measurement to the nearest one-eighth of an inch. Measure the left biceps in the same manner.
5. Try a practice session with the extremely slow chin and dip. Doing each movement well requires a little learning. A training partner is also helpful. Make sure you place a barbell for the biceps curl next to the chinning bar and the dumbbell for the triceps extension near the parallel bars. It's important to move quickly from one exercise to the next. You'll also want to practice those weighted, negative-only chins and dips if you're unfamiliar with them.
6. Begin your initial workout on May 8, 2006. You could also start on the next day. Train four, non-consecutive days over two weeks... do the Reverse Pre-Exhaustion Cycle during the first week and Double Pre-Exhaustion Cycle during the second week. For example, exercise on Mondays and Fridays of both weeks: May 8, May 12, May 15, and May 19. Allow for plenty of recovery and growth time (at least two or three days) between workouts.
7. IMPORTANT: Add four non-arm exercises to complete your routine on each training day. I suggest the squat with a barbell or the leg press on a machine; some form of calf raises; the lateral raises with dumbbells; and shoulder shrugs with a barbell or dumbbells. Use as much resistance as you can for one set of 8 to 12 repetitions. Do these four exercises after your arm cycle.
8. Be progressive in all your exercises. Each session, add time on your slow chin and slow dip. Increase the resistance by 2-5 percent on any exercise that you can achieve 12 or more repetitions on.
9. Limit your strenuous activity on your off-days. Also, get more rest and sleep, if possible. The idea is to hit your biceps and triceps very intensely – then back off and permit them to grow larger.
10. Eat nutritiously and don't skimp on calories. I reinforce the concept of consuming small and medium-size meals more frequently and staying well hydrated.

Post your BEFORE and AFTER measurements


 
Told ya Bro, you been worried about squatting, but its the guns the chicks dig.

They are a kunce for me, slow growing kunce to be precise, what ever I did for them, only overtraining worked, had to treat them like a big muscle and they moved a little, stubborn kunce they are.
 
Train them 2-3 times a week and they will grow, focus on triceps more-so than biceps, no X workout is going to help over another....use a mix of volume, heavy weights, drop sets, supersets.

No science behind it - just train them......
 
Chin ups, lots of them.

my 14" guns disagree LOL

That is pretty much all I did (and bench press) for arms for the first few years of training. Max chinup was +60kg at 80kg BW, still 14" guns.

Now that I can't actually do heavy chin-ups I've been doing more isolation stuff. I find it incredibly boring but got to do what you got to do. And yeah, frequency is 3-4x a week with a variety of rep ranges. Never anything below 10 (as it is too much stress for my shoulder) and I have gone up to 100 ( 20kg bb curl) See if that makes a difference over time.
 
8 hours, 16 workouts... 4 x 10 dumbell tris, 4 x 10 dumbell curls and 4 x 10 ez bar tris, 4 x 10 ez bar curls... nice.

Complete one, rest. Complete the other, rest. repeat.
 
Holy shit [MENTION=3627]Silverback[/MENTION]; you just triggered memories from the late 80s/early 90s for me too. Ellington Darden's arm routine I first read in either MuscleBuilder/Flex magazine back when he was trialing it in the late 80s/early 90s.

He seemed to drop off the radar after that, although he now has his own website and everything. He must have fell out of favour with Weider.
 
I have always thought my biceps sucked. Always struggled to get a good mind muscle connection.

managed to get them to just shy of 20 inches lean in my prime, but overall my biceps sucked as 3/4 was tricep!

i have learnt recently that my traps and shoulders have been doing 3/4 of my bicep work, due to postural issues.

Looking forward to to pumping up my biceps with some decent form!
 
Holy shit @Silverback ; you just triggered memories from the late 80s/early 90s for me too. Ellington Darden's arm routine I first read in either MuscleBuilder/Flex magazine back when he was trialing it in the late 80s/early 90s.

He seemed to drop off the radar after that, although he now has his own website and everything. He must have fell out of favour with Weider.

As with most things he wrote, it takes guts to work at the rate he intends, most didn't get it.
 
I think he's a muppet. I was taking the piss.

...that doesn't actually work does it?!

from what I've heard most don't like it.

The one I remember was alternating Bicep work and Tricep work at the top of each hour then having a feed and repeating this for 8 hours. But Rich Pinner wasn't even around then.
@Silverback ; might know how long the 8 hour arm workout has been around for :)
 
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