Ok, so this is a bit of a science geek question:
In physics, the equation for net force is Force = Mass * Acceleration... in other words, from a physics perspective, there is no difference between lifting 50kg at 1 m/s than lifting 25kg at 2 m/s... Both have a net force of about 500 Newtons (N)...
Also, the equation for the amount of work done is Work = Force * Displacement... so if you lift 500 N for 1 metre 10 times, it is the same as lifting 250 N for 1 metre 20 times (or 500 N for 0.5m 20 times, for that matter). In either case you have done 5000 Joules of work...
I can understand that lifting different distances (half lift vs full lift) works different parts of the muscle, but can someone explain what it is specifically about high weight/low reps that makes it more beneficial for adding muscle mass than low weight/high reps? (other than, "it just does!" hehehe)...
Sorry, long post...
In physics, the equation for net force is Force = Mass * Acceleration... in other words, from a physics perspective, there is no difference between lifting 50kg at 1 m/s than lifting 25kg at 2 m/s... Both have a net force of about 500 Newtons (N)...
Also, the equation for the amount of work done is Work = Force * Displacement... so if you lift 500 N for 1 metre 10 times, it is the same as lifting 250 N for 1 metre 20 times (or 500 N for 0.5m 20 times, for that matter). In either case you have done 5000 Joules of work...
I can understand that lifting different distances (half lift vs full lift) works different parts of the muscle, but can someone explain what it is specifically about high weight/low reps that makes it more beneficial for adding muscle mass than low weight/high reps? (other than, "it just does!" hehehe)...
Sorry, long post...