Type I fibers have VERY low potential for hypertrophy. The purpose of a Type I fiber is endurance, therefore they have less actin and myosin (the stuff that makes you grow) and more mitochondria (the stuff that gives you muscular endurance). By training your Type I fibers, you will not grow to any significant degree, simply because they don't have the capability. There are benefits to training Type I fibers, though. Since type I fibers have the greatest mitochondrial density and number, they produce the most energy supplying substances which aid in contraction of the Type II fibers, which means you will be able to produce more force. Type I fibers are only trained to a significant degree with reps above 20 and slow contraction speed. Training in this manner will completely esclude any Type II stimulation (which have the greatest potential for growth) which means a small muscle. Another thing is that the more you train your Type I fiber the more Type I fibers you will have, and the more you train your Type II fibers the more of them you will have. There is another contractile protein in muscle called MHC (myosin heavy chain) IIX fibers, which are just hanging around waiting to be converted to Type I or II. You can actually create more Type II fibers by training your Type II fibers and create less Type I by not training them. Additionally, training Type I fibers does little for nervous system training, so you wouldn't be able to stimulate maximal growth of any fibers because the nervous system just wouldn't be capable of it. So, don't worry about your fiber type ratio and just fucking put some weight on the bar and lift it, you'll be better off.