Hey, no problem. The basic premise here is you start with a heavy compound (multi-joint) movement for the 5-rep stuff, then afterward do something a bit more concentrated for the 8-12 rep stuff with the same muscle group. If it's a leg day, you either work hams hard and quads light, or quads hard and hams light. If it's an upper day, you work antagonistically - pairing a push with a pull in either the horizontal (ie chest and back) or the vertical (shoulders and lats). Always the same format: for a given "direction", pick a 5x5, then a 3x8 and 2-3x12. You can start with a push or a pull, or alternate between the two but for a given direction, always start with the 5-rep heavy stuff before moving on.
For instance, suppose it's vertical push-pull day.
- You could do 5x5 military press, then 3x8 Olympic bar corner press, then 5x5 weighted chins, then 3-12 standing lateral raises, then 3x8 unweighted chins???
or
You could start with the millies, head straight to the weighted chins, then the unweighed chins, then back to shoulders for the higher rep stuff???
...but any one muscle group is worked with a heavy 5x5 compound before doing higher rep work for that same muscle, if this makes sense.
The "big compounds" you'll start with for the 5x5s will remain fairly constant:
- Quad dominant: back squats
- Ham dominant: Deadlifts
- Horizontal push: bench press (flat or incline)
- Horizontal pull: heavy bent over rows
- Vertical push: shoulder press (of some sort)
- Vertical pull: chins/pullups (weighted or unweighted)
The 3x8 and the 12-rep stuff can vary a LOT.
Select movements you CAN do with your available equipment and go from there. For a horizontal push you can do flat or incline barbell press for the 5x5 work, lighter barbell presses, weighted or unweighted pushups for the 8 or 12 rep pressing.
Horizontal pulling you're looking at bent over rows and t-bar rows.
Front squats, no the bar should NOT be attached to the stand! These are free barbell squats.You'll just hold them with a clean or crossed grip in the front, rather than behind your neck and delts.
You can do regular RDLs, use the barbell. This is for hams/posterior chain. Ignore the supersetting thing, stick with low and higher rep squats and you won't go wrong. Try walking lunges holding plates in your hands. Those are INSANELY brutal and excellent for the higher rep stuff on your leg days.
Bicep work, maybe 2-3 movements with 3x8-12? I have a bicep article up in my blog, you can look at that for ideas if you like.
Got Built? » Baby Got??? Biceps!