• X Shop
  • Checkout

X-REP.COM

Dedicated to Your Physical Transformation

  • Home
  • About Us
  • X Shop
  • X Files
    • Latest Articles
    • FAQ
    • Ezine Archive
  • Testimonials
  • Contact Us
  • Gallery
  • Subscribe

Ripped Muscle Weight

Steve with a belly vs. smooth and muscular vs. cut

Q: In a recent issue, you showed three photos of yourself: one with a belly; a smooth most-muscular; and ripped with abs. How much did you weigh in those photos? [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: abs, before and after photos, lean mass, ripped muscle

New Ripped Muscle: The After-Fast After-Burn

Steve Holman in a smooth most muscular *before* pic compared to a lean-and-muscular side pose *after* pic

In the new Muscle-On, Belly-Gone “Diet” ebook, Steve outlines how he used 12-to-14-hour fasts a few days a week to get ripped in 10 weeks.

From mid-June to the end of August 2021, he hunkered down, muscled up, and leaned out. [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: abs, anabolic, anabolic diet, before and after, diet, fat burning, free e-book, growth hormone, insulin, intermittent fasting, lean, muscle building, muscle-on belly gone, Old Man Young Muscle, ripped, ripped muscle, Steve Holman, testosterone, thyroid, vascularity

Moment of Bodybuilding Zen 134: Rich Gaspari’s Side Triceps

This is a great photo of Rich Gaspari looking aesthetic in the gym… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: aesthetic, bodybuilding zen, density training, heavy training, Lee Haney, mass gains, moderate weight workouts, mr. olympia, Rich Gaspari, ripped muscle

Moment of Bodybuilding Zen 56: Arnold at Age 19

This photo of Arnold at age 19 from his book Education of a Bodybuilder, shows his incredible genetics: chest structure, long biceps, wide shoulders/small waist. [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 3d muscle building, arnold schwarzenegger, austrian oak, bodybuilding zen, Brad Schoenfeld, education of a bodybuilder, genetic potential, genetics, Harvard research, hypertrophy triggers, mechanical tension, metabolic stretch, muscle damage, positions of flexion, ripped muscle, teenage Arnold, the oak, training for teenagers

Metabolic Mass Move: Get High for Muscle Size

Q: I’ve been reading a lot about high-rep leg work, specifically squats. How it can add 20 pounds of muscle in six weeks. Do you think high-rep squats are worth the effort? I know they are tough, but if I get bigger faster, I’m in. Plus, I train at home and have limited weight anyway, so that would save me from buying more plates.

A: We were in touch with a bodybuilder who packed on an amazing 50 pounds of muscle in just over a year’s time. And he attributes a lot of that to adding a high-rep set of squats to his leg day (his full story was in an old issue of IRON MAN)… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 20-rep squats, eat the fat off, freak physique, genetics, Harvard research, high-rep leg workout, iron man magazine, mass building, metabolic drive, muscle size, Randall Strossen, ripped muscle, squats

Moment of Bodybuilding Zen 41: Shawn Ray

Shawn Ray is often referred to as the uncrowned Mr. Olympia, taking second in that contest twice: ’94 and ’96. His physique was almost flawless as this classic pose shows… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: aesthetics, after-40 muscle building, bodybuilding zen, Brad Schoenfeld, Chris Dickerson, classic physique, Dr. Dimitrios Stamou, eat the fat off, Harvard research, mechanical tension, metabolic stress, mr. olympia, muscle damage, physique, POF, positions of flexion, ripped muscle, Shawn Ray

Moment of Bodybuilding Zen 39: Frank Zane’s Abs

Frank Zane wasn’t the biggest bodybuilder of his era by any stretch. He competed and won the Mr. Olympia weighing around 190 at 5’9”. And 40 years later, his physique is still considered an ultimate ideal by the majority who lift… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: abs, anabolic reload package, bodybuilding zen, eat the fat off, frank zane, free e-book, Harvard research, physique, ripped, ripped muscle, x-treme lean

Fast or Slow to Grow? Here’s 2 Get-Big Tactics

Q: I had your original 10-Week Size Surge book from many years ago and just picked up the Size Surge 2.0 e-book. Thanks for revising it to include 4X training! I’m 45 now with a lot of joint damage from heavy “lifting,” if you want to call it that. So your [moderate-weight] 4X method is perfect and has me making new muscle gains. Thank you! My question concerns the “finisher” set you recommend in one of the workouts. Do you think pure-negative or negative-accentuated sets are better?

A: For the uninitiated, the Size Surge 2.0 e-book has a few new workouts compared to the original, including an alternate Phase 2 routine that’s Positions of Flexion with a few heavy sets, 4X work, AND a one-exercise mass finisher using an intensity method… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 10-week Size Surge, Dr. Dimitrios Stamou, eat the fat off, fast reps, Harvard research, intensity tactics, muscle size, myofibrillar growth, negative-accentuated, negatives, pure negatives, ripped muscle, Size Surge, slow reps, slow-mo, tension time, x-celeration, x-centric

New Muscle Size With Speed and Progression

Heavy bench press

Q: I am almost 50 and making incredible gains with the 4X method. I was reading that top trainer Charles Glass believes new muscle growth can be created with this style, thickening new fibers as well as expanding the sarcoplasm. However, he says you should still go “heavy” every so often. Every time I do that, my joints ache for days. Should I just put up with it and pile on the poundage every couple of weeks?

A: If you like going mega heavy, do it—but you’ll suffer the consequences. Glass says to train heavy every so often in order to keep the type 2B power fibers growing… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4x method, Charles Glass, downward-progression 4x, Dr. Dimitrios Stamou, eat the fat off, freaky ripped, Harvard research, heavy weights, Lou Ferrigno, muscle size, power fibers, progression, pumping iron, ripped muscle, sarcoplasm, short rests, size, speed reps, type 2b

V-handle Pulldowns

Q: In the BASIC Power-Density Mass Workout you have V-handle pulldowns as the only lat exercise. I know you I.D. that as the Ultimate Exercise for lats in The Ultimate Mass Workout e-book, but those hurt my forearm. Can I do regular [pronated-grip] chins instead?

A: Yes, but you won’t be able to do both Power and Density for chins—unless you’re freakishly strong on that exercise…

We suggest chins for Power and regular pulldowns for Density, like this…

Chins, (pyramid) 3 x 9, 7, 5-6
Pulldowns, (4X) 4 x 10

Pulldowns with woman spotting

Of course, if you’re a freak, you can go ahead and do a 4X sequence on chins after your power sets. But most trainees will need less than bodyweight, so pulldowns is the answer. Power plus Density for muscle immensity.

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

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


Ripped Muscle Now: Harvard Research

Harvard researcher Dr. Dimitrios Stamou discovered an enzyme that eats bodyfat. It’s helping women and men lose up to 21 pounds on average in less than 28 days.

Plus, it can help bodybuilders get freaky ripped faster than ever (see the pic of the 69-year-old who is shredded at the link below).

Remember, when you’re leaner, you look bigger than ever… And best of all, your body can MAKE this fat-blasting enzyme by eating these specific foods… and they taste GREAT.

Our colleague, the man who owned the gym that Lou Ferrigno trained at in “Pumping Iron,” turned us onto this. He’s using it himself to shed fat faster than ever, and he’s in his 50s. Get the details and see his photo HERE.

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: Harvard research, power-density, pulldowns, ripped muscle, ultimate exercise for lats, v-handle pulldowns

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next Page »

:: Get the latest news and specials :: Sign Up for our Ezine!

Shopping Cart

Number of items in cart: 0

  • Your cart is empty.
  • Total: $0.00
  • Checkout

Log In

Copyright © 2026 · X-Rep.com