LftHndPwrHouse said:
Do it really slow and see how hard it is to do it.
I can see it helping twitch muscles and over all strength.
"Twitch" muscles? I guess you mean slow-twitch.
Doing
true super-slow--something like a 10 second negative--is very hard if you're using a heavy weight. There's no doubt about that. I speak from experience.
But is it near as productive as conventional training?
I have to say again, I've never
seen too many buff super-slow guys. Most of them have rather limited development and are usually not extremely strong.
I say if it works so well, where are the big super-slow guys? There are PLENTY of SS dudes out there, and as I already said, there are very few standouts.
If you watch powerlifting bench press compititions they lower it slow very slow..to show balance and strenght then they have to stop on thier chests and push up. Try that i bet it kicks your ass!!
If you're talking to me...BZZZZZT!
I've
already done paused bench presses, and I do much slower negatives than 95% of EVERYONE I have EVER seen training. Over 11 years, that's probably 7, maybe 8,000 people.
And yes, that IS tough, but super-slow isn't doing a smooth 4 second negative for a 1RM. It's doing an entire set very slowly, with 10 second positives as well. The practicioners even use a
metronome to help time their ascent/descent.
Trust me, the stuff doesn't make for a great "everyday" training program. It has a limited application. As a rule it's best to control the negative, then explode through the positive.