What Rep Ranges are Best for Muscle Growth?

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 186

  • @adamthompson9585
    @adamthompson9585 Před 2 lety +121

    I have been Weight training for over 10 years and the most effective way I have built muscle is to focus more on muscle time under tension. 6-12 reps at a slow and steady pace for 3/4 sets will trigger muscle growth and get the blood flowing into the muscle fibres. The biggest mistake any beginner can make is to lift too heavy for low incomplete reps AKA ego lifting. Focus on form over anything that you do and time under tension.

    • @marc2638
      @marc2638 Před 2 lety +8

      Very very true,,,,,, the other half of your comment is diet. No one will get anything without the fuel they need to build. Your comment is 100%facts though and I agree with you 💯👍

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +11

      Agreed 👍

    • @demoncore5342
      @demoncore5342 Před 2 lety +1

      Slow concentric is poor form tho...

    • @atlaskaiser9951
      @atlaskaiser9951 Před 2 lety

      That will only work for beginners, when u reach a plato, you need to go for 5 reps 10 sets 30 to 90 seconds between reps, at a weight of 90% of ur max rep

    • @commantrosexetlos4700
      @commantrosexetlos4700 Před 2 lety +2

      Doing that for a year I got bigger stronger and guess what.. Lost all explosive power.. And in the end now I am smaller and way stronger.. Why? Because now I can put full power at half time.. Its the same with torque and horsepower.. Split my week to 2 pieces.. Half slow and heavy and half explosive

  • @supersonic882
    @supersonic882 Před 2 lety +27

    Training with light weights is such an important thing to know especially for those who are suffering from an injury. Now I feel a big relief I can build my chest without heavy weights until I recover completely from shoulder impingement.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +3

      Exactly right! 👍

    • @josptyoutube5832
      @josptyoutube5832 Před 2 lety +1

      You don't have shoulder impingement, that is an outdated diagnosis. The therapist who told you that is not aware of the latest evidence and therefore probably prescribing the wrong treatment.

    • @supersonic882
      @supersonic882 Před 2 lety +1

      @@josptyoutube5832
      Yup I've seen people talking about this point and it's a big hustle to know the right diagnose unfortunately even with new studies and research still not easy to get 100% explanation .
      For someone like me who isn't a scientist or physical therapist it won't matter alot much what i call it so...
      But still Maybe i shouldn't call it impingement anymore you're righ 👍🏼.
      My MRI diagnose was this( Hypertrophic Osteoarthritis changes on ac joint followed by narrowed subcrumial space)

    • @josptyoutube5832
      @josptyoutube5832 Před 2 lety +1

      @@supersonic882 Instead of impingement call it rotator cuff related shoulder pain or aspecific shoulder pain. It does matter because of the strong psychological influences from the term impingement. Regarding your MRI, that isn't a diagnosis, it is a summary of what they've seen. Regarding that, these are pretty normal findings.
      Regarding what you have to do, search for a specialised (sports) physical therapist, one who knows something about shoulder pain.

  • @supersonic882
    @supersonic882 Před 2 lety +20

    Keep going 👍🏼 we support science based videos, this is what fitness community needs

  • @robinuitterlinden9814
    @robinuitterlinden9814 Před 2 lety +17

    Exactly the advice i give to people who train in my old school gym PROGRESSIVE OVERLOAD GYM.
    As a gym owner and coach this is the way i train people or advice people..
    Great video.💪👍

    • @robinuitterlinden9814
      @robinuitterlinden9814 Před 2 lety

      By far the most informative and easy to understand You Tube channel i came accross in the 12 years i watch those type's off video's.
      I saw this channel today for the first time and watched a couple video's and share them on my Facebook page to inform other people.
      This is a no bullshit channel.
      Loving it..
      Keep up the great work .
      Greetz from the Netherlands..

  • @r.e.4640
    @r.e.4640 Před 2 lety +15

    Stick to 4-6 reps when going heavy
    And 8-12 reps when going moderately heavy
    And 15-25 reps when going light
    Periodize these 3 rep ranges

    • @Christian1Juarez
      @Christian1Juarez Před 2 lety

      So i should do all of these until failure or near failure or some days failure and some days near failure? The only difference is lifting heavier will increase strength and not the size you look vs lifting lighter will increase the size you look and not necessarily the strength you get?

    • @No_Enemies_Kale
      @No_Enemies_Kale Před 2 lety +1

      @@Christian1Juarez Personally, what I've found to be useful is going 2x8, and then 1x10-12 for the last, or first set, perhaps even in between. Just so that you're able to get the feeling of going close to failure without wearing your body down so much each session. At the end of the day you want recovery to be more important than going all out so you can maintain and build upon your ability to lift heavier at that rep range.

    • @Christian1Juarez
      @Christian1Juarez Před 2 lety

      @@No_Enemies_Kale Thanks for the reply. I will try this out!

    • @Sami-om6vb
      @Sami-om6vb Před 2 lety

      Amen to this. Personnaly, i go for 20. if i can go to 25, next set i'll go slower. If i can go to 30, i'll increase the weight. Finally, last set, with fatigue, i can go to 15-20 and it's still okay.

    • @dannyyy97
      @dannyyy97 Před 2 lety

      Whats periodize mean

  • @captainmichaelj2321
    @captainmichaelj2321 Před 2 lety +5

    Fantastic content once again, highlighting some details that are often missed out in other hypertrophy videos/articles. Absolutely hitting the point.

  • @manamagma5310
    @manamagma5310 Před 2 lety +5

    Interesting. For me works best
    Mass
    6-8 for small muscle groups (biceps, triceps, shoulder)
    8-12 for bigger muscle groups (quads, lats, chest)
    Definition
    8-15 with lower weights and higher rep speed

  • @user-jm9jz4ku5h
    @user-jm9jz4ku5h Před 2 lety +1

    This channel is so underrated seriously! the research, the infographics the presentation is really well done! i hope you continue making videos and i wish you sir to have alot of subscribers!

  • @rg-pq1kb
    @rg-pq1kb Před 2 lety +4

    slowing down, pausing etc can change the feel of a weight also while cutting down on injury risk

  • @oscarsanchezgiller
    @oscarsanchezgiller Před 2 lety +1

    I started to see your videos couple days a go and their are helpping and answering all my questions, great work, keep it up.

  • @totallyraw1313
    @totallyraw1313 Před 2 lety +1

    Καλή Χρονιά Peter!

  • @MushroomNinja
    @MushroomNinja Před 2 lety +5

    You have a lot of cool videos and I watched a good number of them. Any chance you can make a video on optimizing muscular endurance? Anything about muscular endurance really.
    You have lightly touched upon it before in passing regarding the 4 pillars and most fitness videos on CZcams barely mention this modality; more often they mention cardiovascular (aerobic) endurance instead (probably b/c the light weight/high reps associated with muscular endurance, is why it isn’t popular)

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      I may be able to make a video on this at some point. Is there a specific reason you want to train for muscular endurance?

  •  Před 9 měsíci +1

    The struggle of failure being at 20+ reps with one weight but not being able to execute good form with higher weight

  • @phralma1000BC
    @phralma1000BC Před rokem

    I have chosen 6 to 15 for mental satisfaction

  • @stevewise1656
    @stevewise1656 Před 2 lety +5

    Great video. Also training below the six rep range will over time cause injury...ask any older powerlifter. The high reps are a waste of time....literally spending too much time in the gym getting those sets/reps close to or at failure.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Agreed, somewhere in the middle is probably best 👍

    • @godlovesyou7684
      @godlovesyou7684 Před 2 lety +1

      Shorter rep ranges with most weight is much harsher on the bones and tissues ; higher reps and lighter is more scarring on the tissue but strengthens the bone over time.(especially HITT training and warmups before actual lifting) May God be With you all🙏🏽

    • @stevewise1656
      @stevewise1656 Před 2 lety +1

      @@godlovesyou7684 I was pointing to the 30 rep ranges some are suggesting. Rep ranges between 6-20, in my case I stay within 8-12 on most sets. I agree, low reps within the powerlifting strength protocols will wreck all connective tissue. I'd never injured myself training until I started lifting within low rep ranges on deadlifts and squats.

    • @demoncore5342
      @demoncore5342 Před 2 lety

      Any data on that claim? Ask Joe Schmoe means nothing. Also, brunt of powerlifting training is in fact bodybuilding, fives and less is done for specificity.

    • @stevewise1656
      @stevewise1656 Před 2 lety +1

      @@demoncore5342 "Brunt of powerlifting is bodybuilding." BS! Are you a competitive powerlifter? Have you been a competitive bodybuilder at a high level...like stood on a stage and posed in front of thousands? I have and none of us powerlifted to build our base or while training for competitions. I'm talking Mr. Olympia winners I knew/know and trained with years ago. That's my data! As for powerlifting, all these guys on YT saying everyone should powerlift for BB contests are mostly getting injured, because heavy squats, bench, and deads are dangerous over time on your joints. They don't talk about their hip and shoulder injuries. Whether you believe it or not, I know a lot of them as well.

  • @Benjaminimize
    @Benjaminimize Před rokem

    The definitive guide 👍

  • @hobostovepipe2199
    @hobostovepipe2199 Před 2 lety

    In this manner very much interesting indeed.

  • @TheTinMan2077
    @TheTinMan2077 Před 2 lety +3

    Powerbuilding
    This magical hybrid title which was created by Ronnie Coleman, you can excersise both as a bodybuilder and a powerlifter, using light and heavy weights, to me this is the path ;)

  • @thomaswhitney9047
    @thomaswhitney9047 Před 3 měsíci

    So I just read the study mentioned at 3:52 and it is significantly misrepresented...
    The RIR on the two groups were different; the high load group trained at ~5 RIR and the low load group trained at ~14 RIR.
    I get that both groups rated their own RPE as 6-7 for the LL leg, but that doesn't mean their true RIR was 3-4. Both groups took sets for one leg to failure and sets for the other leg to 60% of the reps needed for failure, and the study states the reps used so we can calculate the true RIR in each group: roughly 5 and 14.
    So yeah, no wonder the low load group didn't see the same gains--their proximity to failure was WAY lower from an RIR perspective.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yes, you are correct. I have re-read this study since making this video and have noticed the 5 vs 14 RIR. I think if you are training fairly close to failure (at least 3 RIR), muscle growth will be similar - even with lighter loads 👍

    • @thomaswhitney9047
      @thomaswhitney9047 Před 3 měsíci

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 Thanks for the response! I really enjoy your channel. 👍👍

  • @cisaro.t4788
    @cisaro.t4788 Před 2 lety +3

    I like to do back off sets, at least for me I got stronger in any rep range, for example yesterday I did 2 sets of BB squats, 315×6 and 225×17

  • @foxdogs1st
    @foxdogs1st Před 2 lety +1

    I perfer to do heavy partials. And lighter full range. I think staying heavy one does have to be concerned about judging failure as much. And all muscle fibers will be recruited. Also, fast twitch fibers grow and respond faster.

  • @mackymac9438
    @mackymac9438 Před 2 lety

    When volume is equated both are good for hypertrophy. Lifitng heavier weights significantly increased 1RM though compared to lighter weights.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Yes, assuming you are talking about the heavier end of the hypertrophy range 👍

  • @RMenon968
    @RMenon968 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @joshmontgomery9942
    @joshmontgomery9942 Před 8 měsíci

    Sets of 5 are as effective as sets of 10 or 15 etc. Its the intensity and how close to failure you are that matters. Lower reps IMO is better because you can reach near or
    To muscular failure
    Much easier and don’t have to fight through a burn which is why most people doing higher reps stop way to early. It’s also a lot easier to overload on lower reps.

  • @Mr0Raul
    @Mr0Raul Před 9 měsíci

    Yes.

  • @Tayvaughn
    @Tayvaughn Před 2 lety

    In summery .. just train hard as u can

  • @FiFiFilth
    @FiFiFilth Před rokem

    I have problems with my shoulder joints, I do train with higher reps on vertical raises. I have also heard that these muscles do react better to high reps than others.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před rokem

      Yes, I have heard that the delts respond better to high reps too. However, I don't know of any evidence supporting this 🤔

  • @seveneleven7255
    @seveneleven7255 Před 2 lety +8

    From my personal experience I can say that training in lower rep ranges (2-6) is probably the best for strength and hypertrophy at the same time, but with the counter effect of added overload to joint health and therefore it's easier to get injured

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, definitely superior for strength gains and definitely more joint stress 👍

    • @dragonchr15
      @dragonchr15 Před 2 lety

      That's why stronglifts and starting strength focuses on "fives" across 3-5 sets

    • @MrDeanmfitz
      @MrDeanmfitz Před 2 lety +1

      This is from your misunderstanding from watching of lifting videos - Not personal experience. Unless you are an extreme outlier, hypertrophy is not optimized with 2 rep sets. This is also the reason why the guy who posted your video left out the hypertrophy part in his reply. Not trying to be mean, just want you to know - 5 is the low end of optimal hypertrophy.

    • @seveneleven7255
      @seveneleven7255 Před 2 lety

      @@MrDeanmfitz what you don't get is that within the low range you can get much stronger and therefore with that added force build more muscle in the future as higher loads for higher rep ranges can be done.

    • @MrDeanmfitz
      @MrDeanmfitz Před 2 lety

      @@seveneleven7255 I totally understand that and that does make sense, but that is not what you said.

  • @Georgi.Karagyozov
    @Georgi.Karagyozov Před 2 lety

    Brilliant video !

  • @CoolBurnz
    @CoolBurnz Před 7 měsíci

    Should rep range prescriptions take into account the range of motion of an exercise? Example: squats (long range) in the low to moderate range and shrugs (short range) in the moderate to high?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 7 měsíci

      that is a good point. Yes, I think it is more practical to perform long ROM exercises with lower rep ranges, and larger ROM exercises with high rep ranges

  • @funnyguy19993
    @funnyguy19993 Před rokem

    In my opinion this is the best for reps
    2-5 reps- Strength
    6-12- Hypertrophy
    13+ - Endurance
    In my opinion 1RMs are pretty useless in terms of strength and are just ego driven. It still could benefit strength but i think 2-5 could benefit more, maybe even 3-5🤔

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před rokem +2

      1RM's are useful for displaying strength, but probably aren't the best for building strength or muscle mass 🏋️

    • @funnyguy19993
      @funnyguy19993 Před rokem

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 Agreed. Its all about progress!

  • @olaffo6731
    @olaffo6731 Před 2 lety +2

    Hi FHP, do you think is a false myth that 6-12 reps range makes hypertrophy while 15-20 makes endurance?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +3

      I think 15-20 rep range IS better for muscular endurance, although it can also achieve equal muscle growth to the traditional 6-12 range 👍

  • @zdtuttauniversity2715
    @zdtuttauniversity2715 Před 2 lety

    i Have pushed into the 100 rep range for lateral shoulders- we'll see it if works! XD

  • @stevebaxter2523
    @stevebaxter2523 Před 2 lety +2

    In your opinion, what would be better for pull ups. Both are 1RIR.
    4 sets 10 BW
    Or
    4 sets of 6 BW+15kgs

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      I prefer weighted pull ups with lower rep ranges, but either will be similarly hypertrophic 👍

    • @stevebaxter2523
      @stevebaxter2523 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 more strength gains with the weighted exercises I assume? Also assume that this covers all over exercises?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Not exactly. I prefer low reps on heavy compound lifts like pulls ups, squats etc. because my cardiovascular systems tends to fatigue with higher rep ranges before the target muscle.
      However for isolation lifts I tend to preference high rep ranges 👍

  • @joshuaybarra701
    @joshuaybarra701 Před 2 lety

    Yes awesome information.

  • @magnumopus1415
    @magnumopus1415 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi FHP, I've seen a lot of your videos they're great! Would you suggest doing more compound exercises or isolation exercises during a workout? For example, if I'm using bench press and pec deck machine. Should i do more sets with bench press or pec deck? ANyways thanks for the vids

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      I would say to evenly distribute your volume across both compound and isolation lifts 👍

    • @dragonchr15
      @dragonchr15 Před 2 lety

      Depends on your goal

    • @Troublenut
      @Troublenut Před 2 lety +1

      Start with compound lifts. At the end tag on some isolation exercises if you like / enjoy

  • @mosashafaga
    @mosashafaga Před rokem

    from experience, doing 15-20 reps better than 12 reps 👌🏻👍🏻

  • @0xM2r
    @0xM2r Před 2 lety

    THANK YOU

  • @sreejith319
    @sreejith319 Před 2 lety +1

    I have a doubt. Iam from india. I have been noticing that people who climb coconut trees for their job has got a good shape. I mean they have got good chest,biceps,triceps and back.They dont take protein supplements,they do same work everyday so according to muscle recovery and growth,how is it possible for them to have good muscle growth with same work daily?
    Can i workout for one muscle daily? Will i get any result?
    Or can i work two muscle group daily?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      You can work the same muscle multiple days in a row. It doesn't se to inhibit muscle growth 👍

    • @sreejith319
      @sreejith319 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 thank you

  • @vekonglengkong
    @vekonglengkong Před 2 lety +1

    How many Sets should I do for Compound Movement (like BB Squat) if I use 6 to 8 Reps Range? 3 Sets or 4 Sets? 🤔

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      This video should answer that question czcams.com/video/16oYtQbGhq4/video.html

    • @vekonglengkong
      @vekonglengkong Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 Thank you so much, mate 👍 Your channel is definitely the best Fitness Channel on CZcams 💪 Keep up the good work!

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      No problem, glad the content is helpful 👍

    • @vekonglengkong
      @vekonglengkong Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 I just subscribed to your channel 👍 looking forward to your next videos 😉

  • @asrul4316
    @asrul4316 Před 2 lety

    thank you

  • @spoopyscaryskelebones3846

    If training

  • @brettclayton8709
    @brettclayton8709 Před 2 lety

    Kind of irrelevant to this topic, but following the speed, power, strength, conditioning, is it alright to do 3 plyo exercises for speed, 3 power exercises, and 3 strength exercises followed by hill sprints for conditioning. Or should the number of exercises be lowered anywhere in the workout? Take into granted doing agility ladder for warm up, quickness, and footwork (American football). Thank you so much love the videos!

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Sounds solid to me! I would lower the number of exercises if an of the following:
      1. sessions are taking too long
      2. Joint aches / irritation
      3. Excessive systemic fatigue
      Otherwise it should be fine to continue this routine 👍

    • @brettclayton8709
      @brettclayton8709 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 thank you man!

  • @willh1655
    @willh1655 Před 2 lety

    Everyone needs to remember that lifting weights, destroys and weakens your muscles. Sleeping, and eating is what builds them up.

  • @wiz186
    @wiz186 Před 2 lety

    Can you please drop a video on how to train your forearms? or if I should even be working my forearms. Sometimes I feel like its like your abs whereas it gets trained indirectly but other times I feel like they wont grow if I don't train them separately

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for the suggestion, will definitely consider making a video on this topic at some point 👍

    • @brianbadonde8700
      @brianbadonde8700 Před 2 lety

      Train them separately, wrist flexion, extention and a gripping exercise, I use bands for wrist curls it's much less stress on the wrist but still a lot of resistance, a wrist roller for extention and an adjustable gripper, don't fall into the trap of training them a lot rest them the same as any other body part and you don't need loads of sets, a few hard sets will do with maybe some high rep stuff for a pump at the end

  • @gothops2632
    @gothops2632 Před 2 lety

    Hey Peter, what does the bulk of the research suggest as the optimal number of sets per week for each muscle group for strength? Have you done a video on this?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Good question. I haven't done a video on volume for STRENGTH only for hypertrophy training. I may make a video on this at some point 👍

    • @gothops2632
      @gothops2632 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 Thanks. Please do.

  • @chrisblanc663
    @chrisblanc663 Před rokem

    Interesting. I thought that higher rep ranges caused more damage to ligaments, and lower reps preserved that type of damage.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před rokem +1

      Unlikely, since lower rep ranges require heavier loads. This tends to result in greater joint stress and a higher injury risk compared with lighter loads 👍

  • @ash_classicphysique
    @ash_classicphysique Před 2 lety +2

    Keep the body guessing is best, no one way is the best way.
    Vary exercises,sets and the amount of weight and listen to your body.
    If I'm going to lift heavy carb up more than usual an hour before.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Definitely a possibility that varying rep ranges may be beneficial for muscle growth 👍

  • @KenanTurkiye
    @KenanTurkiye Před 2 lety

    I go, you go, we all go 👍 algo

  • @Tomy-im8zl
    @Tomy-im8zl Před 2 lety

    I'm sorry to point that out, but your graphic at 3:54 is very misleading and you should change it if possible. The study you are referring to do not compare reps to failure vs 3-4 reps in reserve (RIR), but instead approximately 6 RIR for the heavy loads and 15 RIR for the lower loads. This means that the latter group was stopping at 20 reps when they could have done 35 reps! That is very far from the 3-4 RIR and does not contradict the hypothesis recommending to maximize the growth/fatigue ratio in that RIR whether it is heavy of light. Other than that, great video!

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      Where did you get those numbers from? When I looked at the results of the study, the average RPE for the non-failure groups was around 6-7 RPE which is equivalent to 3-4 RIR. Unless I missed something?

    • @Tomy-im8zl
      @Tomy-im8zl Před 2 lety

      ​@@FlowHighPerformance1 Well, unless we are looking at different studies with similar titles, in the one called "Muscle Failure Promotes Greater MuscleHypertrophy in Low-Load but Not in High-LoadResistance Training" published in 2019", the 6-7 was for the number of repetitions done for the heavy loads without failure (while the group with heavy loads to failure was doing 12 reps). So maybe that's where you got mistaken with your 6-7 RPE, or maybe you got your info from another study… Also in the study they did the same amount of total rep for failure and non-failure group, meaning that the non-failure group did close to twice the number of sets, so the quality of a non-failure set was not as good as a failure set in that case.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Ah yes, I looked into more detail at the results and you're right. The group's training not to failure performed more sets to equate volume load. So the RPE ratings were rating of the entire session rather than a gauge of proximity to failure. Thanks for pointing this out! However, I still think it makes sense to train slightly closer to failure when training with lighter loads 👍

    • @Tomy-im8zl
      @Tomy-im8zl Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 You're welcome and thanks for the response! There seems to be some kind of an academic consensus about what you think but even though I'm not against that position from a theoretical perspective, I feel that the recommendations are forgetting some important clarifications. For example, I believe that 2-3 RIR is ideal for muscle growth in any hypertrophy range. But 3 RIR at 12 rm (so 9 reps) means that you are keeping 25% of the energy in the tank, while 3 RIR at 21 RM is just the equivalent of 14 % and for 27 RM it would be 11%. So even if in absolute number of reps those sets are as close to fatigue, these are not as close in proportionality, and higher number of reps are still in fact closer to fatigue. That’s why when I saw your study I went to see the methodology just to see if it really disproved my theory, because if it's the case, well fine I'll train better in that range, but even though most academic seems to prescribe this I'm still waiting to find a study rather than hypotheses contradicting my theory. Alright, take care!

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes everything you have said makes sense! Thanks for sharing, and making me think deeper about this topic. Hopefully we have more direct research on this topic in the near future 👍

  • @ashutoshkumar4797
    @ashutoshkumar4797 Před 2 lety

    I train with 20 pound (10kg) dumbbell and in the first set i came to failure at 7 reps and in second set at 5 and in third set failure at 4 reps. So can anybody tell me whether i should stick to the weight of 20 pounds(10kg) or decrease the weight.

  • @mildxfs7368
    @mildxfs7368 Před 2 lety

    A question pls.
    i grab 12kg for bicep curl
    First set i lift 12 rep /RPE10
    Rest 2 mins.
    Second set i can lift only 9 rep/ RPE10
    Is this 12 kg still ok for the third and fourth set? Or i should drop weight to stay in 12 rep.
    Thanks in advance 😃

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +1

      Either way is fine. As long as you keep lifting with a close proximity to failure, and don't drop your reps too low (below ~6) then hypertrophy outcomes will be very similar 👍

    • @fahrtechnikguide3677
      @fahrtechnikguide3677 Před 2 lety +2

      Important is, to drop the weight in Set 5 and go for 16 to 20 reps.

  • @litutheking6646
    @litutheking6646 Před 2 lety

    My trainer suggest 15 reps with 3 set as a beginner. With low loads . Is this maximum for good hypertrophy???? Pls answer me!

  • @Kashigori
    @Kashigori Před 2 lety

    can u explain what does 80% 1 rm mean ??

  • @az9498
    @az9498 Před 2 lety +1

    I've recently dropped the weight I was reping in the 8-12 range and am doing lighter weight for 14-20 reps.
    Feels pretty good and I wonder if I could be temporarily getting more hypertrophy because of the switch up from my normal ruitine 🤔

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Possibly. However, it could also be just due to the novelty of switching rep ranges 🤔

    • @az9498
      @az9498 Před 2 lety

      That's basically the same thing I said but yeah 👍
      Feels good men

  • @johntatman9168
    @johntatman9168 Před 2 lety

    I have a question. If we stay working with lighter loads are the same exact motor units recruited or are they randomly selected each time we do the exercise or is that even know?

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety +2

      Regardless of load, all motor units will be recruited and trained by the end of a set - if we are training close enough to failure 👍

    • @johntatman9168
      @johntatman9168 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 That's what I was getting at, if we don't train to failure and we simply put ourselves in an overuse situation does science know if this leaves us recruiting the same fibers over and over or will the body rotate which fibers are used in this situation.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      The general principle is that the type 1 (slow twitch) fibres are always recruited first, and the type 2 (fast twitch) fibres are recruited last 👍

    • @johntatman9168
      @johntatman9168 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 First, thanks for responding. I think you are in a round about way answering my question. Let me give you a scenario to emphasize my point. If I do a bicep curl with 1/2lb and I do 3 reps then 2 hrs later I do it again and I keep this up all day is the muscle recruiting the "exact" same fibers each time or will it randomly rotate through all the tpye 1 slow twitch white fibers. I have studied a&p extensively and no where can I find any research/studies on this. I suspect this is an unknown and yet I believe it leads to overuse/repetitive use injuries.

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      I am not sure. Look at hennemans size principle, it might give you some answers 👍

  • @SirGawainDF
    @SirGawainDF Před 2 lety +1

    All your videos on hypertrophy do NOT need to be so long. Why so much blabbing on things when people only need a few minutes of concise advise? Really too much speaking.

  • @melisachandra9260
    @melisachandra9260 Před rokem

    Zac be

  • @RedEyeification
    @RedEyeification Před 2 lety

    8-12.

  • @patrickjohnson721
    @patrickjohnson721 Před 2 lety

    It doesn't actually matter...

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 2 lety

      Why?

    • @patrickjohnson721
      @patrickjohnson721 Před 2 lety

      @@FlowHighPerformance1 Because the sole determining factor of muscle growth is effort

    • @skylermccloud6230
      @skylermccloud6230 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@patrickjohnson721not true the rep range can determine if your focusing more on sacroplasmic or myofibrillar hypertrophy

  • @skylermccloud6230
    @skylermccloud6230 Před 10 měsíci

    I build muscle fastest in 4-6 rep range idc what the studies say especially when theres one study that says this and another that says that the research caries so much its almost useless to even bother reading it

    • @FlowHighPerformance1
      @FlowHighPerformance1  Před 10 měsíci

      That is very possible. Some people respond better to slightly higher/lower rep ranges 👍

    • @skylermccloud6230
      @skylermccloud6230 Před 10 měsíci

      @FlowHighPerformance1 I would say most people do providd3d they keep proper form it equals more mechanical tension and makes progressive overload easier over time whoch are factually the two biggest determines if growth idk why people think now a days that more reps equals better if that were true calisthenics would be superior. There's also the fsc theory weights focuses more on myofibrillar than sacroplasmic hypertrophy which is why I also do t get why people say lower reps don't produce hypertrophy they do in fact its the hypertrophy that you really need it your muscles are working harder with a heavier load. There's also the fsct every rep is hard as hell with 10 reps its only the last 2 or 3 that are even difficult and your likely to stop early and not even train to failure 4-6 is superior long term as long as your joints can handle it and you keep good form its dumb people think it's only for strength how the hell do eople think your getting stronger muscle!