pullinbig said:
Well first off I didn’t say lightweight, I said lighter weight. There is a big difference. Sets will still be done to failure of near failure. The lifts will be more controlled as well, slower descent. I strongly urge all who start lifting to use a PLing routine to build a good foundation. Most will flourish on this kind of a routine. But for some strength will continue while size seems to stop. In the case of many BBers you see guys who are fairly thick to damn huge but aren’t that strong in accordance with their physique. Why is this is? Because the style of training they do promotes more size and less strength gains. A hypertrophic style of training is more what these guys do. Adding more sets or reps than a typical Pling routine. These routines are aimed more towards muscle building than CNS training. Bear in mind I am no expert on this kind of stuff but rather speak from experience, years in the gym and watching those around me. Some of the thickest guys in my gym are BBers who train this way. They have good strength but don’t match strength lb/lb with the power lifters. Is this to say all who PL will not grow? NO! All most all of them do grow and get big. But for a small % of the guys they either don’t grow or stop growing at a certain point while strength continues to increase. Now this is taking for granted that diet, training and supplementation is in place.
Now for your second question. Higher volume always builds size/strength faster than lower volume till over training kicks in. As far as doing higher volume work to lose BF I don’t see the correlation. To small degree it works but diet and cardio are the main players here, with diet being about 75-90% of it. As long as over training doesn’t take place muscle atrophy will not occur if diet and all else is in place.
Perhaps Frosty or one of the other physiology guys can tune in here to give more of the ins and outs of this strength vs size-training topic. Mine is based mostly on experience and some studying but I as I stated earlier I am no expert.
To a large degree, size gains are dependent on genetics (considering all other factors equal), so one guy might eat out his ass and lift to get big but not be able to, while one might be able to blow up like a balloon with the same routine. If your body has it programmed in itself to say "I'm gonna weigh 165 and no more," then by God, you're gonna weigh 165 and no more, with the caveat being if you either eat enough to kill a horse with a tapeworm (i.e VERY high cal diet) or use AAS. While staying at that size, your body will continue to adapt to the weights you're throwing at it so that your strength will increase, you just won't have as large (or any) degree of hypertrophy.
As far as doing the higher volume work for fat burning properties, I don't see a correlation either. There's no way to spot reduce fat, so I don't see how doing super high reps of curls or something will help to trim fat, unless you're doing a circuit training type program, where your lifting is part of your cardio. In this setting (which I don't see the value in, b/c you're not pushing yourself to the max every time you lift), then yes, super high reps will aid in fat burning. I still don't see how this will be catabolic, however, until you overwork the CNS and enter a state of overtraining. At that point, or just short of it, your body will let you know it's time to slow down if you'll just listen, so you can nip the problem in the bud and reduce volume for a time until the body is ready to hit it again. Overtraining = catabolic, but I don't see how high volume work in general is catabolic (just look at some of these freak bodybuilders that do [blood] volume work day in and day out -- they may not be the strongest guys you'll ever see, but they DO grow).
Whether it's relavent or not, I'm gonna use myself as an example of my point on genetics. I can eat the exact same diet as my peers and gain weight/size like nobody's business, where most college kids as active as me would be losing weight like a sorority chick. In eating a college diet (I've tried to eat clean, but still wind up goin out for junk food at least 1-2 days per week) I've gained 40lbs, a full inch on the arms, >3" in my chest, etc. in the last 12 months, whereas my roommate eats as much or more than I do and struggles to maintain his bodyweight, much less grow (really doesn't try to either --- sissy machines and shit [high volume lifting])........and I outweigh him by over 45lbs already, meaning that, in theory, I should have to eat more to maintain my weight than someone who weighs 175-180.
However, I haven't increased any of my max lifts except for deads since around Xmas of last year. I'm working out with probably 40lbs more on all lifts now than I was then, but my maxes won't increase. Another friend of mine can't gain size, but his maxes won't STOP increasing. Genetics, pure and simple.