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Pump set question
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08-15-2018, 12:18 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-15-2018, 12:20 AM by Dahmkooler.)
I was hoping to get some feed back on pump set execution. I've done a search, but haven't found anything that gets at my question exactly. Apologies if this has been answered elsewhere!
When I do a pump set, particularly for lower body exercises, I am rarely able to go to true 'failure'. In other words, I think I could always grind out another rep or three on leg press, for example, but it just hurts so freaking bad that I can't get it up. I know a lot of the intention of pump sets is to autoregulate and individualize, but I'm curious how common my experience is to others? Interestingly, I don't seem to have this problem with many upper body excercises...
Part of the reason I ask is an article I read by Eric Helms discussing the utility of high rep sets. He was very skeptical of their utility unless taken to true mechanical failure, and not simply the point where you can't take the pain any more.
Scott (and others) - do you think I am leaving a lot on the table stopping a pump set at 'metabolic failure' (for lack of a better word!)? Or is simply accumulating an excruciating metabolite build-up accomplishing the goal here?
(As an aside, Helms argues that it's likely that sets performed in a study are almost certainly taken to true failure, since there is always a team of grad students screaming in their ear during the set, and he's skeptical that most lifters are able to take their sets to true failure; therefore, he argues that they may not be able to replicate the muscle growth seen with high reps in some of these studies. I find this somewhat hard to believe, considering the low level of training of most lifters in studies, that they would be able to push harder than an experienced lifter with 5+ years of hard training.)
Thanks!
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I think it’s important to distinguish the rep cadence/tempo used on FT pump sets versus just an unspecified but possibly widowmaker-esque high rep set to failure. I’m not familiar with the study you mentioned, but I would imagine that a balls out failure set with people screaming at you probably looks more like a widowmaker with the trainee pausing between reps while eking out the last few, as opposed to the constant tension no matter what FT pumps sets. The more widowmaker-like set might also have you pacing yourself and pausing/breathing between reps earlier in the set. Pump sets for legs are definitely a mental battle towards the end, but I’ve found that if you keep pumping and contracting nonstop as prescribed, that you hit failure after much fewer reps than if you were to stop even for only two seconds and then keep going for a few more. For example, on a leg press pump set I might fail on rep 25 going non-stop, whereas if I took a two second breather after rep 22 I might be able to get closer to 30.
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08-15-2018, 10:32 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-15-2018, 10:33 PM by Dahmkooler.)
(08-15-2018, 03:51 AM)ebado Wrote: I think it’s important to distinguish the rep cadence/tempo used on FT pump sets versus just an unspecified but possibly widowmaker-esque high rep set to failure. I’m not familiar with the study you mentioned, but I would imagine that a balls out failure set with people screaming at you probably looks more like a widowmaker with the trainee pausing between reps while eking out the last few, as opposed to the constant tension no matter what FT pumps sets. The more widowmaker-like set might also have you pacing yourself and pausing/breathing between reps earlier in the set. Pump sets for legs are definitely a mental battle towards the end, but I’ve found that if you keep pumping and contracting nonstop as prescribed, that you hit failure after much fewer reps than if you were to stop even for only two seconds and then keep going for a few more. For example, on a leg press pump set I might fail on rep 25 going non-stop, whereas if I took a two second breather after rep 22 I might be able to get closer to 30.
Thanks for the reply, and I totally agree with your re: pausing to squeeze out a few more reps. I suppose I was just curious how many people feel like they stop pump sets because they can't tolerate any more pain, as opposed to not being able to contract the muscle any further. And if the training effect would be much different taking the sets to true failure.
There may just be an adaptation period for me, as very-high rep (continuous) sets are not something I have done in a long time
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(08-15-2018, 12:18 AM)Dahmkooler Wrote: I was hoping to get some feed back on pump set execution. I've done a search, but haven't found anything that gets at my question exactly. Apologies if this has been answered elsewhere!
When I do a pump set, particularly for lower body exercises, I am rarely able to go to true 'failure'. In other words, I think I could always grind out another rep or three on leg press, for example, but it just hurts so freaking bad that I can't get it up. I know a lot of the intention of pump sets is to autoregulate and individualize, but I'm curious how common my experience is to others? Interestingly, I don't seem to have this problem with many upper body excercises...
Part of the reason I ask is an article I read by Eric Helms discussing the utility of high rep sets. He was very skeptical of their utility unless taken to true mechanical failure, and not simply the point where you can't take the pain any more.
Scott (and others) - do you think I am leaving a lot on the table stopping a pump set at 'metabolic failure' (for lack of a better word!)? Or is simply accumulating an excruciating metabolite build-up accomplishing the goal here?
(As an aside, Helms argues that it's likely that sets performed in a study are almost certainly taken to true failure, since there is always a team of grad students screaming in their ear during the set, and he's skeptical that most lifters are able to take their sets to true failure; therefore, he argues that they may not be able to replicate the muscle growth seen with high reps in some of these studies. I find this somewhat hard to believe, considering the low level of training of most lifters in studies, that they would be able to push harder than an experienced lifter with 5+ years of hard training.)
Thanks!
Before I forget - do you have a link the article / post Helms wrote on this topic?...
So, there's the topic of locus of fatigue here - central (brain) vs. muscular vs. various subtleties in between (reflexive inhibition, excitation-contraction failure e.g. at the neuromuscular junction, etc., etc. etc.).
The bottom line falls back on progress and choosing a Volume Tier which permits this (i.e., that you can recover from).
Back to the topic: The idea of true mechanical failure would be supported by the notion that if you were to superimpose e-stim upon a contraction at the point of failure, that you'd not have an increase in force output. There are some major issues with using this approach (you can look into twitch interpolation and central activation ratio if interested), b/c you'll find, for instance that you can come up with conclusion that untrained subjects (during a maximal effort - not at the end of a set per se) can supposedly fully activate a muscle voluntarily, but we know that if you take those folks and train them for a few months, strenght goes up substantially, in a way that simply is not possible solely due to an increase in muscle mass - it's a neurological phenomenon.
The point of the above it that there's likely a wide range to the extent to which subjects and trainees can push through pain and put the locus of fatigue on the muscle vs. a psychological reason, so the presuming there's a kind of state that can be reached where failure is purely mechanical (in the muscle) is likely an oversimplication.
Instead, there is probably varying degrees to which pain influences performance as well as the inhibitory influences, e.g., via Type III and IV sensory receptors (see link below) are inhibiting and changing motor output in a way that least to fatigue.
ALSO, the idea with Pump Sets is to create metabolic stress so if you're carrying that out (it sound like you are) and not bringing those sets to some sort of mechanical failure, that's probably not a huge issue b/c the mechanical tension does'nt seem to be the stimulus that's vital to high rep sets. (Take occlusion training, for instance). The other Set Types of FT are more so set up to create a mechanical (tensile) overload stimulus.
And I do agree with you on the topic of untrained folks pushing harder (even with in-the-lab encouragement) gym rats, but there's a lot of overlap there, too.
Last thing is that your you muscle fatiguabilty might he higher (more type II fiber, for instance) such that you're getting a very substantial metabolic stress from the Pump sets (and rapid onset of fatigue), which *could* mean that you're getting a great stimulus for growth from Pump Sets for your legs. OTOH, it could be just be a central (CNS) issue in that you're not quite able to create the neural drive for the larger musculature of the lower body (compared to the upper body work), or even that there is some cardiorespiratory influence here (you're gassing out).
ALl of the above really still comes down to VOlume Tier and exercise selection, order in particular).
I'm not sure which Tier(s) you're using, but you might find that you can shift the locus of fatigue towards the muscle and away from any cardiorepiratory / central loci by doing isolation exercise (e.g., knee ext. and ham curls) before doing compound thigh movements.
-S
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3730936
-Scott
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The above and all material posted by Scott Stevenson are Copyright © Scott W. Stevenson and Evlogia QiWorks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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(08-15-2018, 10:40 PM)Scott Stevenson Wrote: Before I forget - do you have a link the article / post Helms wrote on this topic?...
So, there's the topic of locus of fatigue here - central (brain) vs. muscular vs. various subtleties in between (reflexive inhibition, excitation-contraction failure e.g. at the neuromuscular junction, etc., etc. etc.).
The bottom line falls back on progress and choosing a Volume Tier which permits this (i.e., that you can recover from).
Back to the topic: The idea of true mechanical failure would be supported by the notion that if you were to superimpose e-stim upon a contraction at the point of failure, that you'd not have an increase in force output. There are some major issues with using this approach (you can look into twitch interpolation and central activation ratio if interested), b/c you'll find, for instance that you can come up with conclusion that untrained subjects (during a maximal effort - not at the end of a set per se) can supposedly fully activate a muscle voluntarily, but we know that if you take those folks and train them for a few months, strenght goes up substantially, in a way that simply is not possible solely due to an increase in muscle mass - it's a neurological phenomenon.
The point of the above it that there's likely a wide range to the extent to which subjects and trainees can push through pain and put the locus of fatigue on the muscle vs. a psychological reason, so the presuming there's a kind of state that can be reached where failure is purely mechanical (in the muscle) is likely an oversimplication.
Instead, there is probably varying degrees to which pain influences performance as well as the inhibitory influences, e.g., via Type III and IV sensory receptors (see link below) are inhibiting and changing motor output in a way that least to fatigue.
ALSO, the idea with Pump Sets is to create metabolic stress so if you're carrying that out (it sound like you are) and not bringing those sets to some sort of mechanical failure, that's probably not a huge issue b/c the mechanical tension does'nt seem to be the stimulus that's vital to high rep sets. (Take occlusion training, for instance). The other Set Types of FT are more so set up to create a mechanical (tensile) overload stimulus.
And I do agree with you on the topic of untrained folks pushing harder (even with in-the-lab encouragement) gym rats, but there's a lot of overlap there, too.
Last thing is that your you muscle fatiguabilty might he higher (more type II fiber, for instance) such that you're getting a very substantial metabolic stress from the Pump sets (and rapid onset of fatigue), which *could* mean that you're getting a great stimulus for growth from Pump Sets for your legs. OTOH, it could be just be a central (CNS) issue in that you're not quite able to create the neural drive for the larger musculature of the lower body (compared to the upper body work), or even that there is some cardiorespiratory influence here (you're gassing out).
ALl of the above really still comes down to VOlume Tier and exercise selection, order in particular).
I'm not sure which Tier(s) you're using, but you might find that you can shift the locus of fatigue towards the muscle and away from any cardiorepiratory / central loci by doing isolation exercise (e.g., knee ext. and ham curls) before doing compound thigh movements.
-S
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3730936
I know it gets said a lot, but it's really hard to believe how incredible a resource this forum is - thanks for taking the time to reply Scott!
Here is the article by Helms:
https://www.strongerbyscience.com/low-load-training/
I think you answered all of my questions and gave me plenty to chew on . I am using Basic Tier II, and have always done compound thigh exercises first for pump sets. I will try adjusting exercise order next time and put quad/hamstring Iso's first. I also think the cardiorespiratory factor could be present, because I'm currently at the heaviest weight I've ever carried, and I do get gassed out pretty easily (my shirt is completely drenched usually ~1/4 through my workout!).
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(08-15-2018, 11:54 PM)Dahmkooler Wrote: I know it gets said a lot, but it's really hard to believe how incredible a resource this forum is - thanks for taking the time to reply Scott!
Here is the article by Helms:
https://www.strongerbyscience.com/low-load-training/
I think you answered all of my questions and gave me plenty to chew on . I am using Basic Tier II, and have always done compound thigh exercises first for pump sets. I will try adjusting exercise order next time and put quad/hamstring Iso's first. I also think the cardiorespiratory factor could be present, because I'm currently at the heaviest weight I've ever carried, and I do get gassed out pretty easily (my shirt is completely drenched usually ~1/4 through my workout!).
No problemo!
These are the kinds of questions I really like!
Thanks for posting the article, too. Will take a look at that ASAP.
-S
-Scott
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The above and all material posted by Scott Stevenson are Copyright © Scott W. Stevenson and Evlogia QiWorks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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