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Shift Your Anabolic Mass Machine Into Overdrive With Progressive Speed

Ripped back on pulldowns - Shift Your Anabolic Mass Machine Into Overdrive With Progressive Speed

Q: I love the 4X mass method and am already seeing new size from it after only two weeks. I notice you’ve been recommending different methods on each set sometimes. Does that work better for mass? Should I be doing that?

A: One method we often recommend is the progressive speed tactic. We know one thing about it for certain: The feel is unreal—deep ache with a muscle-expanding pump after only three sets… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4x mass method, anabolic, eccentric, failure, growth fibers, mass, microtrauma, muscle fibers, myofibrillar expansion, negative-accentuated, progressive speed 3x, progressive-speed, pump, sarcoplasm, sarcoplasmic expansion, sarcoplasmic fluid, Size Surge, size surge workout, speed sets, testosterone, x-celeration, x-centric

Muscle-Building Mistake You Can’t Afford to Make

Dumbbell flyes, stretch position - Muscle-Building Mistake You Can't Afford to Make

Q: A lot of bodybuilders go all power in the off-season. They push for more strength so size will follow. I’m thinking about using the Phase 1 program in Size Surge for that purpose—mostly big exercises with heavy weights training three days a week so I get plenty of recover-and-grow time. Would that program be okay to use for the entire 10 weeks instead of moving to Phase 2?

A: You’re right, even Arnold used to do a two-to-three-month power phase in the winter—but it wasn’t heavy low reps on every exercise, as we’ll explain. That’s the problem with the way most trainees do it: They go heavy on ALL exercises all the time for too long and neglect critical sarcoplasmic size, which can be a big muscle-building mistake… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, 4x mass method, actin, arnold, arnold schwarzenegger, atp, bulking, cardio, creatine, Doug Brignole, force-generation, glycogen, hiit, mitochondria, Mr. America, muscle fibers, muscle size, muscle-building, muscle-building mistake, myofibrillar expansion, myofibrillar growth, myofibrillar size, myofibrils, myosin, off-season, phase 1, phase 2, Power, sarcoplasm, size, Size Surge, sterngth, testosterone, winter workout

Last-Set Shuffle to Pack On More Muscle

Steve helping Jonathan with forced reps on hammer curls

Q: I like the idea of doing something different on the last set of a 4X sequence. You mentioned a drop set, and that works great. What about a heavier pure-negative set? Like on curls my partner would lift it for me, and I would lower [a heavy weight] slowly for six negative reps.

A: That depends on what you’re trying to accomplish. Pure negatives—your partner lifts the weight, and you lower in six seconds—are designed to attack the force-generating myofibrils in the muscle fibers, which means they are primarily for strength building with only minor size effects, so not really building a lot more muscle… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, actin, build more muscle, burn fat, drop sets, fat burning, more muscle, muscle damage, muscle fibers, muscle fullness, muscle soreness, muscle trauma, muscle-building, myofibrillar expansion, myofibrils, myosin, negative-accentuated, pack on more muscle, Power, pure-negative sets, rest/pause, sarcoplasm, sarcoplasmic expansion, size, size building, strength, strength building, tension time, testosterone, x-centric

Maximum Muscle Mass Without Heavy Weights?

Power-Density graph - Maximum Muscle Mass Without Heavy Weights?

Q: Do you believe that a person can max out muscle growth with 4X-style training considering you only use medium poundages?

A: We know for a fact that 4X-only workouts build a lot of muscle—and without straining joints because the poundages aren’t super heavy. Remember, with 4X you take a weight with which you can get 15 reps, but you only do 10; rest 30 seconds, then do 10 more; and so on until you do 4×10—and only the last set or two are to failure… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 2a fibers, 4X, 4x mass workout, 4x pyramid, 4x training, density overload, endurance, genetic potential, hypertrophy, mass without heavy weights, maximum muscle mass, microtrauma, muscle fibers, muscle growth, negative-accentuated, power and density, power-density, power-density graph, shock-centric, Ultimate Power-Density Mass Workout, x-centric mass workout, x-hybrid techniques

Once-a-Week Mass Workouts: The X-centric Shock Method

Under grip pulldowns - Once-a-Week Mass Workouts: The X-centric Shock Method

Q: You’ve said that training each bodypart only once a week never worked for you. But I saw mention in a previous article that you did make gains doing that with X-centric training. I like training each bodypart only once a week because that’s the way the pros do it. Should I use X-centric training to make it work better for me?

A: First, following the pros workouts is a bad idea for 99 percent of us. Steroids and other anabolic drugs make most of what they do NOT applicable to drug-free trainees. It’s like trying to make your Toyota Camry perform the same way as a Formula-One racing car. It can’t be done without some MAJOR “enhancements.”… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic drugs, drug-free, eccentric, eccentric muscle contractions, emc, fat-to-muscle workout, fiber trauma, hypertrophy, jerry brainum, mass workouts, muscle fiber density, muscle fibers, muscle trauma, na, negative-accentuated, once-a-week, POF, positions of flexion, protein synthesis, size, steroids, strength, tension time, ultimate fat-to-muscle workout, x-centric, x-centric mass workout, x-centric shock, x-centric shock method, x-centric training

The 4X Get-Bigger Trigger

Jonathan Lawson cable curls - The 4X Get-Bigger Trigger

Q: I gave the 4X method a try, and it feels amazing. Definitely a big pump. I’m just worried that since only the fourth set is to all-out failure that I’m not getting enough intensity to stimulate growth. I’m used to doing two to four sets on each exercise to total exhaustion. Will my muscles regress on 4X?

A: In The 4X Mass Workout e-book we explain the all-or-none principle of fiber activation. What that means is that a muscle fiber fires at 100 percent or not at all. So even on SUBFAILURE sets, you’re getting bundles of fast-twitch fibers to fire completely. [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, 4x mass method, 4x mass workout, 5x, cortisol, exhaustion, fast-twitch fibers, fiber activation, get-bigger trigger, growth fiber activation, growth threshold, intensity, muscle fibers, muscle size, stimulate growth, subfailure

Explosive Reps: Mass-Building X Factor

Steve Holman spotting Jonathan Lawson on incline presses - Explosive Reps: Mass-Building X Factor

Q: I just saw an interview with a top pro bodybuilder, and he said one of the keys to building mass is to explode at the bottom of every rep and attempt to move the positive rep as fast as possible. Are explosive reps a good idea? I’m afraid of getting injured.

A: The big pros are the genetic elite with superhuman muscle-fiber density, as well as ironclad tendons and ligaments. And don’t forget that many use growth hormone, which fortifies cartilage, tendons, and ligaments even more (that’s why many athletes use it—to quickly rehab soft-tissue injuries and prevent others from occurring in the gym and on the field.) [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic overload, building mass, cardio, controlled explosion, drug-free, eccentric, end-of-set x-rep partials, explosive reps, extreme mass, fast-twitch fibers, genetic elite, genetics, growth hormone, hiit, mass building, muscle fibers, myotatic reflex, pack on mass, pro bodybuilder, super genetics, testosterone, X Factor, X Reps, x-rep partials, x-traordinary x-rep workout

One Key Change for Fast Size Gains

Jonathan Lawson dumbbell incline flyes - One Key Change for Fast Size Gains

Q: I’ve been using the X Fade and Double-X Overload techniques from the Beyond X e-book, and I’ve gained six pounds in one month. My previous workouts were always heavy training, so I’m wondering if maybe I added so much muscle with those methods because they’re giving me some density I’ve been missing. They both make my sets last longer. Could that be it?

A: That’s a distinct possibility, although there’s more to it, as you’ll see. But as you suggest, most wanna-be-big bodybuilders rely almost predominantly on heavier, lower-rep training, and their sets last only 20 seconds or less (time your sets; you will be surprised!). That’s a mistake if you want maximum mass and fast size gains…

A set of 20 seconds or less is power emphasis—but you need BOTH power and density to get TOTAL growth in the majority of the muscle fibers. With those two X-hybrid tactics, X Fade and DXO, you definitely have been X-tending your sets—more so with DXO, which we really like on stretch-position exercises like flyes…

Jonathan Lawson dumbbell incline flyes - One Key Change for Fast Size Gains

DXO: This is simply adding an X-Rep partial near the stretch position between EVERY full rep—so each of your reps is really a 1 1/4 rep. The “hitch” at the bottom between each full rep emphasizes stretch overload, which has been shown to induce everything from hyperplasia, or fiber splitting, to anabolic hormone release in muscle tissue. Plus, as you noticed, it puts more of a mass-building density spin on the set as well…

If you do 9 reps in DXO style, your set will last more than 30 seconds. Now you’re getting into density territory for adding size to that side of the key type 2A mass fibers. That’s a great get-bigger trigger, especially if you’ve been using mostly power sets. Your six-pound muscle gain in one month is no doubt due to a combination of density and heightened fiber activation. You get both of those with DXO—and the X-Fade technique…

X Fade: With this X-hybrid tactic you do a standard set of, say, cable flyes, a contracted-position exercise in the Positions-of-Flexion mass-building protocol. When you hit full-range exhaustion, where most bodybuilders end the set, you get the cable handles back up to the contracted position—a partner can help—and do three to five short partials there, flexing the target muscle…

Cable flyes, top position - One Key Change for Fast Size Gains

Then you lower to the stretch position and do standard X-Rep partials there. If you can’t manage any movement at either position, just hold for a static pec contraction for a few seconds at each spot—top flexed and bottom stretched. Key growth fibers will still be firing and you should wake up some dormant ones as well for new size stimulation—you’ll feel it…

Cable flyes, bottom position - One Key Change for Fast Size Gains

Doing end-of-set X-Rep partials at BOTH the top and bottom of the stroke with the X Fade will add maybe six to eight seconds to your tension time. Nevertheless, both DXO and the X-Fade tactic are excellent ways to get more density training, activate more growth fibers to fire and give you excellent change to fuel fast size gains.

Note: For more info on all the X-hybrid Training Tactics, check out the Beyond X-Rep Muscle Building e-book below: 
Beyond X-Rep cover

Till next time, train hard—and smart—for BIG results.

—Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson
www.X-Rep.com


ATTENTION OVER-40 BODYBUILDERS

One of the most interesting read-me pages on Testosterone and other muscle-building hormones we’ve seen is The Truth About Testosterone.

It even talks about a fruit, a specific part, that can up your T naturally. Cranking up your testosterone will not only get you jacked in the gym, but in the bedroom too—not to mention help rip up your midsection as it ignites fat burning. If that interests you, there’s more from our colleague and registered dietician, HERE.

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 2a fibers, anabolic hormones, Beyond X, beyond x-rep, density, Double-X Overload, dxo, end-of-set x-rep partials, fast size gains, fiber splittying, growth fibers, hyperplasia, mas-building, maximum mass, muscle fibers, positions of flexion, Power, power and density, size stimulation, stretch overload, X-Fade, x-hybrid tactics, x-rep partial

Which Way is Best?

Jonathan Lawson barbell squats - Which Way is Best?

Q: I’m ready to try The Ultimate Fat-to-Muscle Workout, but you have different workouts in that e-book. The first program is four days a week, but each bodypart is worked only once each week. The second program is three days a week, but again you train each bodypart only once. Then in the Q&A chapter, you suggest using the three-days-per-week routine over four days per week [following the 3-day sequence so each muscle is hit more than once a week]. Which way is best?

A: It’s tough to answer which way is best because we don’t know the extent of your recovery ability, stress levels, experience, etc. Remember, the Fat-to-Muscle workouts have negative-accentuated sets, which do great things for a fat-to-muscle metamorphosis during microtear repair, AND heavy power pyramids, which also are very abrasive to muscle fibers. Those two factors may force the need for more recovery—like seven days. [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, avoid overtraining, basic program, direct/indirect, fat-to-muscle workout, microtears, muscle fibers, negative-accentuated, nervous system, overtaining, power pyramids, recovery, recovery ability, stress, testosterone, volume, which way is best, x-centric mass workout

Best Rep Speed for Muscle Growth

Jonathan Lawson dumbbell pullovers - Best Rep Speed for Muscle Growth

Q: What is the best rep speed for muscle growth? I want to look like a bodybuilder/physique athlete, so I’m not that concerned with strength. I just want more muscle mass.

A: In The X-traordinary X-Rep Workout e-book we cite a study that attempted to determine the optimal rep speed for building muscle. It compared doing sets with a two-to-three-second positive and a two-to-three-second negative—about three up, three down—with sets using a power cadence, which is one second up and three seconds down. The power cadence produced the most mass in this study. [Int J Sports Med. 30(3):200-204; 2009.] [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic, best rep speed for muscle growth, bodybuilder, building muscle, eccentric, fast-twitch, fat-to-muscle, fat-to-muscle workout, international journal of sports medicine, muscle biopsies, muscle fibers, muscle growth, muscle mass, myotatic reflex, optimal rep speed, physique athlete, protein remodeling, rep speed, semi-stretch, semistretch, ultimate fat-to-muscle, x-centric, x-centric mass workout, x-traordinary x-rep workout

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