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I can only train two days a week, so I’m using the Basic Ultimate Mass Workout 1. I really like the idea of training each bodypart with only the absolute best compound exercise, and I’m getting some excellent results after only three weeks! My problem is that the workouts make me feel a little drained. Can I cut back to one set on some of the exercises and still make gains with X Reps?

 

A: That’s a solid routine, but training the whole body with the best compound exercises, even if it’s only with a couple of sets, along with X Reps can be taxing. It’s not for every body. That’s why we provide alternatives, like a three-day version and a four-day version, with some of the workouts lasting only 35 minutes or so. You said you can only train two days a week, however, so those aren’t options for you.

Here’s a better alternative to simply cutting the sets: Try the drop-set technique with X Reps so that within the one set you’re actually doing two in less time. For example, on incline presses, do a set to failure, finish the set with X Reps at the appropriate position, then reduce the weight to a poundage that allows about six hard reps. You’ll be doing about the same amount of work in less time, which is a classic intensity amplification technique for mass building. You can do that on as many exercises as you want, doing one X-Rep drop set instead of two straight sets. That should reduce your workout time considerably, have you feeling less drained and may even produce better results!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: drop sets, Ultimate Mass Workout

Will X Reps work for a superhardgainer like me?

 

A: Absolutely! (Remember, Steve is a hardgainer, and they did excellent things for his size and muscularity in only one month—and that’s after 35 years of training!) Realize that the biggest reasons someone is a hardgainer include low neuromuscular efficiency (below average nerve-to-muscle connections) and endurance-oriented muscle structures (even many of the fast-twitch fibers have more endurance). X Reps can improve both of those deficiencies significantly.

Remember that X Reps extend any set, so in that regard they provide a slight endurance component, which is exactly what hardgainers’ endurance-oriented muscles need. A standard eight-rep set to failure, using a one-second-up/one-second-down rep speed, lasts 16 seconds (8 reps x 2 seconds). That’s not enough tension time to trigger growth in endurance-oriented muscles; however, you can extend that by five to eight seconds with X Reps, taking the total tension time of the set past the important 20-second mark. Twenty seconds is considered by many scientists to be an ideal time for maximum hypertrophic stimulation in any one set. Also—and this is important—the Xs occur at the optimal spot in the exercise’s stroke for fast-twitch fiber overload. Short pulses at that point force the muscle to continue firing, even after nervous system fatigue. So X Reps extend the tension time on your muscles—past the 20-second mark—and gradually build better nerve-force capabilities, or neuromuscular efficiency. You’ve just knocked down two hardgainer roadblocks to more mass with X Reps!

And if you combine drop sets with X Reps you can get an even better hardgainer-specific workout—extending the set up to 40 seconds, without overtaxing recovery ability, something hardgainers tend to have less of than average trainees. We include X-Rep drop sets in many of the programs in The Ultimate Mass Workout for that very reason. It’s just a good, solid muscle-building strategy whether you’re a hardgainer or not.

Steve Holman before and after

Scrawny to brawny: X Reps directly target hardgainer deficiencies and can help transform skinny bodies. Steve, with his light bone structure and slow-to-grow muscles, made some of the best gains of his life in the one month he used X Reps—even at the age of 44 and after 30 years of training!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: hardgainer, Steve Holman, Ultimate Mass Workout, UMW, X Reps

Are squats destroying your knees? (quick-fix video)

Demo video - Are squats destroying your knees

In the Ultimate Mass Workout, the official X-Rep manual, we identify squatting-type moves as the best quad builders…

Plus, higher-rep squats have been shown to boost metabolic and anabolic drive, rapidly accelerating muscle gains—10 to 20 solid pounds in only a month. You get new growth all over, even in your arms and torso. [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic after 40, anabolic drive, king of all exercises, knee pain, knees, legs, metabolic drive, muscle gains, quads, quick fix, squats, squatting-type moves, ultimate exercise, Ultimate Mass Workout, video, x-rep manual

The Ultimate Freak-Physique Workout?

Lawson side dumbbell curl

Q: I got the Size Surge 2.0 and X-treme Lean. Really great info. Is the Size Surge Phase 2 Workout the one Jonathan used to get in ripped, freaky condition? I know the diet he used is in X-treme Lean, but there’s also a workout in that e-book. Is that the one? [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: freak physique, jonathan lawson, POF, positions of flexion, Size Surge, Ultimate Mass Workout, X Reps, X-Rep, x-treme lean

One-Exercise 2-Way Blast for New Muscle Mass

Jonathan Lawson decline presses -One-Exercise 2-Way Blast for New Muscle Mass

Q: In a previous e-zine you mentioned combining two workouts with different bodyparts, such as chest and back with delts and arms. And you suggested using an X-centric set for each exercise in a Positions-of-Flexion routine. I was thinking about your first e-book, The Ultimate Mass Workout, which I.D.s the best exercise for each muscle. How about doing only those exercises, one regular set followed by an X-centric set? That way you focus on the ultimate exercise and get some power and density work as well as standard speed and slow-mo reps.

A: Sounds like a great plan. And you’re right: focusing on only ONE “best” exercise for each muscle would help you zero in and provide the most mass bang for your effort buck… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 2-way blast, belly fat burn, best exercise, blood-flow, fat loss, fiber activation, full-body workout, hormones, mass blast, muscle mass, new muscle mass, POF, positions of flexion, tension time, ultimate exercises, Ultimate Mass Workout, x-centric

Max Force for Major Muscle

Steve spotting Jonathan on Smith machine squats - Max Force for Major Muscle

Q: In your early e-books, like The Ultimate Mass Workout, you say that generating maximum force is the key to muscle mass. To me, it doesn’t seem like you ever exert max force with 4X training because you are using moderate weights. Do you still think creating maximum force is the way to build the most mass?

A: Yes, we believe force is one of the big keys to packing on muscle mass—but there’s more than one way to get enough… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, 4x mass workout, 4x training, all-or-none law of fiber activation, all-or-none principle, bodybuilder x, boost testosterone, cardio, danny padilla, density, fast-twitch fibers, fiber activation, gains, growth fibers, max force, maximum force, muscle gains, muscle mass, POF, positions of flexion, Power, power and density, semi-stretch, testosterone, Ultimate Mass Workout, x-rep partials

Workout Change for Major Muscle Gains

Jonathan Lawson front squats on Smith machine - Workout Change for Major Muscle Gains

Q: I really like the Direct/Indirect Split in the 4X Mass Workout e-book. My problem is I can’t work out on Wednesdays—only Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. If I put that split over those days, the Thursday and Friday workouts have too much crossover. The same muscles are getting trained on both days back to back. Is there a workout change I can use as a solution? I really want to use the Direct/Indirect schedule so I can hit my muscles multiple times a week to build more mass.

A: First, let’s look at the setup you can’t use, the direct/indirect split in the 4X e-book… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, 4x mass method, 4x mass workout, direct/indirect, efficient, mass building, muscle gains, testosterone, Ultimate Mass Workout, workout change, x-rep manual

Before and Afters: Steroid-Using Bastards?

Jonathan and Steve before and afters - Before and Afters: Steroid-Using Bastards?

Q: I’ve been a dedicated lifter and eating healthy for over 20 years, and if Jonathan Lawson achieved the huge ripped size he had in those photos at the X-Rep.com Web site drug-free, I’ll eat my shorts. 🙂 Steve Holman maybe would be believable as drug-free, but I’m skeptical there too.

A: We’re not sure which photos you’re referring to, but on the left below are our afters from our first X-Rep year (the program we used is in The Ultimate Mass Workout) and on the right is the following year using many X-hybrid techniques (our program and methods are in Beyond X-Rep Muscle Building). We get the steroid accusation a lot—Jonathan especially because of his better bodybuilding genetics—but we’re both drug-free in all of our photos. Get out those shorts and start chewing… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4x method, before and afters, beyond x-rep, beyond x-rep muscle building, bodybuilding, caffeine, dianabol, drug stack, drug-free, drugs, dxo, hypochondriac, legendary pro bodybuilder, performance-enhancing drugs, photos, pro bodybuilder, ripped, steroid, steroid-using bastards, steroids, studio photos, tanning, Ultimate Mass Workout, vascularity, x fate, X Reps, x-hybrid techniques

The Forgotten Muscle-Size Trick

Frank Zane - The Forgotten Muscle-Size Trick

Q: You guys don’t seem to like training each muscle only once a week like a lot of pro bodybuilders. How come?

A: More muscle-training frequency is a BIG size stimulator, especially for drug-free trainees—if you do it correctly. Many pros can get away with training each bodypart with excessive volume only once a week because of genetic superiority and, of course, excessive drug use. In fact, if you look back at the best bodybuilders of yesteryear, when steroid use was minimal, training each bodypart THREE times a week was the norm prior to a contest. It’s a bit of a forgotten muscle-size trick… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 4X, 4x mass workout, arnold, arnold schwarzenegger, direct/indirect, drug-free, drugs, eccentric, frank zane, frequency, genetics, muscle trauma, muscle-size trick, natural bodybuilders, negative-accentuated, nervous system, neuromuscular efficiency, one-hit-per-week, physique, pro bodybuilders, sergio oliva, size stimulator, steroids, strength, Ultimate Mass Workout, volume, x-centric, x-centric mass workout

Which X-Rep Program to Start With

Jonathan Lawson and Steve Holman before and after X-Rep photos - Which X-Rep Program to Start With

Q: I heard about X Reps from a guy at my gym. He suggested I get one of your X-Rep e-books, but after looking at your site, I realize there are a lot of them. I need help figuring out which X-Rep program to start with.

A: A lot of our newer trainees as us which X-Rep program to start with, so for a good overview of X Reps as well as key X-hybrid techniques, we recommend The X-traordinary X-Rep Workout. It was written a few years after our first X-Rep e-book, The Ultimate Mass Workout, so we’ve included all the critical highlights of what we learned up to that point… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: before and after photos, end-of-set x-rep partials, muscularity, positions of flexion, progress, steroids, testosterone, trick photography, Ultimate Mass Workout, which x-rep program to start with, X Reps, x-hybrid techniques, x-rep mass-detail workout, x-traordinary workout

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