• 🛑Hello, this board in now turned off and no new posting.
    Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community! 💪
  • 🔥Check Out Muscle Gelz HEAL® - A Topical Peptide Repair Formula with BPC-157 & TB-500! 🏥

strength gains = muscle mass?

perfecto

dirty but nice
Registered
Joined
Sep 24, 2002
Messages
388
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
land down under your mum
IML Gear Cream!
ok because its hard to tell whether you are adding muscle due to seeing yourself everyday, is it probable to say that if you are increasing in lifts you are geting bigger? presuming you train heavy and high volume. Hope this question makes sense..

cheers
 
They are correlated, but it certainly is not linear. But as a general rule of thumb, yes, you can assume as much.

I find, frequently, that strength gains happen first, then hypertrophy kicks in shortly thereafter.
 
On the flipside of the question.

What do you lose first, muscle or strength?
 
I apologize for being so broad. I would assume that you can keep muscle longer than strength if you continue to use the same weights and eat properly. Then I suppose you could assume that strength would hover if kept at the same weights and eatting properly.

Anymore incite on this?
 
Personally, strength. I imagine that differs.
 
whats the difference in training principles between powerlifting and normal mass building training?
 
powerlifters do a lot of triples, doubles, and singles along with speed work, use of chains, and bands to work for the explosive power. they do box squats of various heights to strengthen their squats in certain areas to help gain that explosiveness. pretty much all of powerlifting is optimizing form to become more explosive and strong. they don't care what they look like, at least most of them it seems anyways.

powerlifting focused mainly on their three lifts: deadlift, squat, and bench. any other work they do is to strengthen these lifts in some way.

mass building obvious focuses on getting a symmetrical look and a big look for some. so you're going to basically do those 3 fundamental lifts as well, but you add the extra lifts that work best for your physique.
 
Measurements every 2-4 weeks sound good. I can say that I can gain or lose strength and not be any different in size measurably, and really there is no direct correlation but there is some kind of relation in most people no doubt. Size can't be compared from one person to the next though and mean that they lift the same weights even if they are the same height/weight, and you can keep your weight down in PL classes and still increase in strength.

Many PLs are not as large or lean as bodybuilders, yet they are generally the stronger of the two.

Rep range, rest periods (and days between bodyparts), are the two primary differences I'd say, but also they are going to stick to more compound movements where BBs will mix it up a bit more and do a higher volume of total sets, and reps.
 
Back
Top