T
The Shadow
Guest
...post em.
Straight-bar Curls
Pulldowns
Flat Barbell Bench
Straight-bar Curls
Pulldowns
Flat Barbell Bench
Cornholio said:...post em.
Straight-bar Curls
Pulldowns
Flat Barbell Bench
SSAlexSS said:
any type of bench
squat
deadlift
chin
SSAlexSS said:
any type of bench
squat
deadlift
chin
JOKER47 said:
Wtf????![]()
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).


SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).
supersizeme said:
You're an idiot. Stop posting this drivel.
p0ink said:
You really are the STUPIDEST motherfucker on this board when it comes to training. I really hope any newbie out there does not heed your ridiculous advice. Good luck getting huge with all those lateral raises and kickbacks, I'll stick to my deads, squats, cleans and bench.
XAX said:Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
How ignorant could one person allowed to be?
Muscles alone?
So forget about GH and test release by the big compound movements, strengthing multiple joints and ligaments at the same time.
It has been proved by russian scientists that squatting can add up to 15% extra mass on the arms.
Personally, it places too much stress on my shoulders and wrists. I get much more chest involvement from incline barbell presses, and flat and incline dumbell presses.
SSAlexSS said:
Express your thoughts. What was idiotic in my post? DOnt like my theories? debunk them!
compound exercises are great for strength! But not nessesary for mass. Strenth increase DOES NOT mean size increase, because strenth is NEUROLOGICAL. Size is muscular hypertrophy. Stress on a muscle rather on your nervous system.
SSAlexSS said:
Express your thoughts. What was idiotic in my post? DOnt like my theories? debunk them!
compound exercises are great for strength! But not nessesary for mass. Strenth increase DOES NOT mean size increase, because strenth is NEUROLOGICAL. Size is muscular hypertrophy. Stress on a muscle rather on your nervous system.
Lord_Suston said:
SSAlexSS: Th reason most compound movement create such size increase if after CNS adaptation (coordination an such) which creates strength, which you are right on, is there is a a cooreltaion with muscle size and strength, IN AN INDIVIDUAL. now this is a very tricky concept, I know it took many years to understand. After you gain coordination, your body starts to grow by increasing myosin and actin, at a greater rate then before coordination. now the important thing is compound movement will tax your muscle greater than a isolated movement becasue of the greater amount of stress place on the muscle, since this is weight related. By taxing your muscle more, your body will grow mre in response to the greater amount of microtears in the fibers of the muscle. This will also cause a release of GH and test. So Higher weight= more tears when training intensly= more growth. But much of this is due to positive failure, because in this state the myosin head and actin are almost fully contracted and are sustaining microtears due to the insufficent ATP in the muscle. Since ATP is depletd faster in compund movement because of the greater demand muscle suffer more stress easier...
ZZuluZ said:Alex, strength is NOT SOLELY NEUROLOGICAL. That is truly a dumb comment.
Cross sectional area is directly proportional to strength in many cases. Bodybuilders aren't weak and they don't train AT ALL in a neural potentiating system.
THe problem with Alex is that he reads ONE tidbit of information and immediately thinks he's a genius who can debunk what experts in the field have known for years.
Alex, you are an idiot. You are. You can reply with 'you're a big meanie who only insults people' but the fact is NOBODY here agrees with anything you post.
-Zulu
ZZuluZ said:Alex, strength is NOT SOLELY NEUROLOGICAL. That is truly a dumb comment.
Cross sectional area is directly proportional to strength in many cases. Bodybuilders aren't weak and they don't train AT ALL in a neural potentiating system.
THe problem with Alex is that he reads ONE tidbit of information and immediately thinks he's a genius who can debunk what experts in the field have known for years.
Alex, you are an idiot. You are. You can reply with 'you're a big meanie who only insults people' but the fact is NOBODY here agrees with anything you post.
-Zulu
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).
SSAlexSS said:
Since I am so stupid.
Why are you even worse? Just because your primitive punk ass brain doesnt get what I have said, you like a animal resort to violence.
Show your brains and post an intellegent reply to that. I doubt it judging from your reply, but I hope that you can!
b fold the truth said:SSAlexSS: Show me that you have a solid muscle in your body and I will listen to you. Guys...just let him post his silly comments...we can all figure that he is a troll I do believe. We can not convince him and he can not convince us...so just let him go about his business and ignore him...that way we don't stray too far from the given post that Cornholio posted.
I think that nearly ever exercise that I have ever done (and in any rep/set fashion) has produced some sort of positve result for me...at least for a very short period of time.
Overrated Exercises:
Any kind of machine
Crunches
Anything that says you MUST do reps for size
I really feel that as long as you keep good form on your exercises and change frequently...EVERY exercise will produce some sort of positive result.
B True
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate.
People keep telling how you have to do squat/dead/bench, isolation (pec deck flys etc) dont work they say.
Well exercises have NOTHING to do with growth. They just determine which muscles get worked.
Furthermore, big compound movements are good for strength. But they dont make a certain bodypart grow bigger than an isolation exercise for it.
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements. Because compound movements sometimes have a big tendency to involve other parts, thus less direct stimulation to the target muscle (chest, lower back, quads etc).
So in that way compound are being overrated (for mass).
SSAlexSS said:
Explain then how little women lift CARS to get their trapped children in there?
Obviously women arent as big as Ronster COleman!
Y_Lifter said:Most definitly Tri DB Kickbacks...
Most everyone does them wrong, too fast or with way too much weight.
VicTusDeuS said:Squats on a smith machine. I hear everyone telling each other how that can build a massive amount of mass on you. I dont think they are as good as lunges with weights. I load up my
ez-curlbar with weight and do all differnt types. My legs are killing me after that...Its great.
JOKER47 said:
Didn't you ever watch The Incredible Hulk when you were young? It's the Gamma rays, everyone knows that.....Jeez.........
Joker
Ash said:I feel that alot of machines are over-rated these days.
--------------------------------------
"Names Ash....Housewares"
SSAlexSS said:
Let me elaborate ...
IF you know how to do stuff you can get lots of mass with isolation movements, sometimes even more than with compound movements.

THERE WERE incidence when determination overcame some physical proportions. Liek women lifting cars to get their children out.
Cornholio said:...post em.
Straight-bar Curls
Pulldowns
Flat Barbell Bench
b fold the truth said:Pissing contest? lol I tend to agree with you...but think that it works on all exercises. People who do not do the flat bench press tend to label it as a "pissing contest" exercise.
Crunches are highly overrated. Full range sit-ups are a must in my opinion.
B True
ZZuluZ said:BTrue,
Sit-ups are not very useful to the bodybuilder. They train the hip flexors and obliques, not the abs.
They are a very good movement however.
-Zulu
ZZuluZ said:Because they diet.
It does work your hip flexors. It's not a question of 'feeling it there'.
My point was: It is not a necessary ab exercise for bodybuilders.
-Zulu
b fold the truth said:I am far from a bodybuilder guys...I really am. I do believe that the hip flexors are muscles that most people avoid because they feel that they should avoid them. Remember...we are all a part of the sport of progressive resistance training...that means progrressively heavier and more intense weight training. The hip flexors help with the body's ability to train all of those muscles.
Full range sit ups also re-align the lower back.
B True
SSAlexSS said:
any type of bench
squat
deadlift
chin
SSAlexSS said:
any type of bench
squat
deadlift
chin
Cornholio said:...post em.
Straight-bar Curls
Pulldowns
Flat Barbell Bench
b fold the truth said:SSAlexSS: I have Dorians Book "Blood and Guts"...and the only machines that he was using in them...were some old hardcore machines. Not the sissy ones I see today. The bic curl or tric pressdown machine will never be as effective as a bar or a dbell...never.
B True
Lumberg said:
Wow. You're the first person I've heard say that in a LONG time. What is your rationale?
The things I've heard against full range sit-ups are 1) they're bad for your back and 2) There's not that much stress on your abs the last bit of the way up so you might as well just do the "hard" part of the exercise.
Would like to hear the positives.
JC
Peckz said:
Most overrated? Umm.. Ab machines and pec decs.
Btw don't dizz cable crossovers. I love to finnish of my pec workout on the cable. The feeling in my pecs are just awesome.
Debaser said:
Yeah, even though pec deck and cable crossovers are also the same type of movement. You will hurt your shoulders, eventually. Just give it time. Who cares if the feeling in your pecs is awesome? Leg extensions are the same way for your quads--but they still suck ass.
Rich_S said:
All this nonsensical crap about situps being bad for you and crunches being the ideal exercise started when Legendary Abs was published by Health For Life back in the early 80's. Their basic premise was that situps and leg raises primarily worked the hip flexors and the abs were only synergists in those movements. That is true. However, the hip flexors are muscles that are involved in a wide range of movements both in weight lifting and in sport - you want to work them because you want them to be strong. That same idiotic book warned against doing side bends and twists because they might make your oblique muscles bigger and detract from your V-taper. God forbid a muscle should get bigger. The really scary part was that they targeted this book not only towards body builders, but towards boxers, martial artists, and other real athletes.
JOKER47 said:
That's a pretty large blanket statement, and I disagree.
When I use to do more of a body building style of workout, I did cable cross-overs and/or DB fly's. There was never any pain in my shoulders.
If you are getting pain in your shoulders from those movements, I suspect you either have a pre-existing shoulder problem, really poor form, or your shoulders/rotator cuffs are way to weak. In which case, you need to work on your weakness.
.02,
Joker
Debaser said:It holds about as much water as saying preacher curls add peak to your biceps.
Rich_S said:
Everyone knows that preacher curls develop the peak of your biceps just like cable crossovers develop your inner chest and higher reps with any exercise bring out the cuts.![]()
Debaser said:
There may have not been pain in your shoulders. There wasn't any pain in mine. Just like many people squat with elevated heels for years without knee problems.
Debaser said:
And you say more of a bodybuilding style of workout. As if somehow flyes will magically do more for your chest than a 400 lb bench. It holds about as much water as saying preacher curls add peak to your biceps.
JOKER47 said:
So, please make your point. You were mentioning how bad they are for shoulders, and neither you nor I had a problem. So, where are you getting your information that they are so bad? Any lift done incorrectly will hurt you.
Meaning, my overall goals were different, and the goal of each workout was different. Similiar to our different training plans. Yours (DC) targeted toards bodybuilding. Mine (modified WSB) targeted towards power lifting/strength training.
How many power lifters or strongmen do you know do preacher curls or flys? How many bodybuilders do you know who do? That's my point.
.02,
Joker
Debaser said:
Here's one such article: http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/matt20.htm
I've seen quite a few but that's the only one I had the location of off hand.
It doesn't matter what your goal is. If you want hypertrophy, flyes suck. If you want chest strength, flyes suck. Bench presses or dips are far superior. And most bodybuilders have little idea what they're doing. Powerlifters, in general, have a much better grasp on things.
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