Sandin Face
Member
This question was inspired by reading the article linked from the thread
Light vs. Heavy Weight High reps or low reps for muscle growth? - flexonline
and everyone's comments on it, but it doesn't involve the heavy vs not-so-heavy question, so I'm starting a new thread. Here it is ...
I've got a chin-up bar which I made by putting an iron bar across a hallway in my house, a bit over two metres up.
I can do a chin-up or two whenever I walk past it. Or, I could do sets of chin-ups as part of a "workout", with other exercises, over a concentrated period of time.
Now, IF I were going to a gym to work out, I'd do my workout in one go, as most of us do. A major part of the reason for doing it this way is time efficiency - you have to get to the gym, change, wait for other people on equipment, let others have a go on equipment, put the weight plates on and off, and maybe even pay per session at the gym - so doing it in one hit, as quickly as you can makes sense.
However, for me with my in-house chinning bar, I can do a set whenever I like. Currently, I can do 4 reps reliably with good form (I was able to do 7 reps earlier in the year, before a bout of sickness).
So, should I still do (with regard to chin-ups only) a "workout" format, in which I do a number of sets with only small intervals of rest in between them, or just do sets whenever I feel like it, spread right through the day?
Light vs. Heavy Weight High reps or low reps for muscle growth? - flexonline
and everyone's comments on it, but it doesn't involve the heavy vs not-so-heavy question, so I'm starting a new thread. Here it is ...
I've got a chin-up bar which I made by putting an iron bar across a hallway in my house, a bit over two metres up.
I can do a chin-up or two whenever I walk past it. Or, I could do sets of chin-ups as part of a "workout", with other exercises, over a concentrated period of time.
Now, IF I were going to a gym to work out, I'd do my workout in one go, as most of us do. A major part of the reason for doing it this way is time efficiency - you have to get to the gym, change, wait for other people on equipment, let others have a go on equipment, put the weight plates on and off, and maybe even pay per session at the gym - so doing it in one hit, as quickly as you can makes sense.
However, for me with my in-house chinning bar, I can do a set whenever I like. Currently, I can do 4 reps reliably with good form (I was able to do 7 reps earlier in the year, before a bout of sickness).
So, should I still do (with regard to chin-ups only) a "workout" format, in which I do a number of sets with only small intervals of rest in between them, or just do sets whenever I feel like it, spread right through the day?
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