@123vicky With such slow reps, I don't see how anyone can argue that your low rep-count matters. It would seem like magical thinking, that there is something special about 'a rep'. If you were battering these reps out one-per-second, then yeah, I would say it's suboptimal.
@123vicky That‘s a great strength plan and if you can add weight after time you sure gain muscle. For maximise hypertrophy i would add MYO sets of different exercises at the end of your workout or even another day. For example take a exercise where you can do 12-20 reps close to failure. That’s your activation set. After that you breath 3-5 times and do another set for 5 reps. Do as many MYO sets until you can’t make 5 reps. Works great with ring rows or inverted rows on bars
@123vicky Unlikely. It fairly well proven that anything below 5 reps is inferior for hypertrophy. But as soon as you add 6-30rm sets in top of 1-3 heavy sets per session you're good. Look into some principles of power building.
@jerseygirl1 I can i do 5-6 reps in each pull ups and dips usually. This is mainly because of the eccentrics thing so I go pretty slow to make it harder. I read and heard that this engages your muscles under more stress to build strength and muscle
@123vicky Anecdotal, and ultimately you should experiment to see what works for you despite what any one offers, but I wouldn't add weight to the Dips. Most people can press their bodyweight easier than they can pull it. 3-6 slow pullups will do more for the average person than 3-6 Dips. Press with more volume and pull with more weight. And I'm not speaking from theoretical research or studies.
@jerseygirl1 I second this. I am always wondering how people do about as many dips as pull ups. Dips have always been a lot easier to me, usually I can do twice as many dips as pull ups with the same weight added.