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see, this is something i've always got conflicting information on. to be honest I've heard that it's very taxing on the CNS (central nervous system if you dont know the abreviation), but if I recall correctly and I may not be... arnolds encyclopedia to body building (which i consider the bible of lifting) stated that you have to train to failure or you wouldn't be tearing down your muscles to build them back up, that once a week he would completly blast a muscle group.
not sure if i recommend doing it every work out though. i dont. i push it hard but not to failure every work out.
That's not what Mike Mentzer says Mr. Gazehole with all due respect.
.....with all do respect,where does he say "do not train until failure" at? I see a lot of words
and some opinions, but where does he actually 'advocate just the
opposite?"![]()
I never liked Mike mentzer and his butt tickler mustache anyways.
Never train to failure unless you alter your volume and training frequency to reflect the extra CNS stress and give yourself time to recover.
So you are saying that training until failure is wrong?
I like Mentzer. I think you just misinterpreted what Gaz was saying.
HIT alters the volume and training frequency.
Quite possible. I'm confused at where the disagreement here is![]()
Exactly. This is why HIT works, and randomly doing failure sets doesn't.
HIT is a great training style, it's one of the few things i actually like that has come out of bodybuilding. The others being Markus Ruhl and those huge stripy clown trousers they all wear.
Couldn't agree more. People hear the training to failure part of HIT, and then try incorporating it into one of their regular routines, which it's not meant for. Or they just randomly incorperate training to failure, either way it's not good.
Absolutely not good at all, haha.
Its like looking at westside and then doing 1RMs every workout in a bodybuilding split. Aint gonna work.
Got to break those muscle fibers down man.
When I have a spotter I try to push my very last couple reps on my last set to failure.
Bench
set 1 x 10
set 2 x 8
set 3 x 6
set 4 x failure
I get great results training to failure. Others might not. Each person is different and will have different results. Must important is to maintain good form even on failure.
I've always been under the impression that going to failure on your last set was a good indication that you had reached the max you could push on an exercise before moving to the next. Is this really a bad idea when taking into account some of the things you guys are talking about with skeletol and nervous system damages?