oilumiun12
New member
@sunflower39 I've trained since I was around 15 years old. Im 45 now and tried just about every type of split and form of training there is over the years. It all works. so long as the intensity and volume is the same per week (or month) whether that's spit up into 2x a week or 1x a week.
Personally I've found myself I make most of my growth on a 'bro split' It allows for more volume per muscle group whilst keeping the workouts relatively short (no more than an hour) whereas as on a full body or PPL there is no where to go volume wise past a certain point as the workouts get too long and any extra volume turns into 'junk' volume as well as impeding recovery due to systematic fatigue .
It's also worth noting that if programmed well (so there is no overlap of muscle groups) your muscles are getting stimulus twice a week, such as if I hit shoulders on a Monday with 16 hard sets, my front delts are getting some stimulus when I hit chest during the week as well as my rear delts when I hit back,
Enough stimulus to 'top up' yet not enough stimulus to count as volume for shoulders or impact recovery, much the same for biceps and triceps.
The pros and cons are that you get to spend a full hour (or however long) punishing that one muscle group. it's a pro or a con depending on how you like to train?
Ultimately so long as programmed well and balancing out the same volume over the month and keeping intensity it all works, whether you're hitting a muscle group once every other day or once every 10 days. Just find what you enjoy the most, that enables you to stay consistent, even if that means cycling from say PPL to a bro split every few weeks or any other type of split
Personally I've found myself I make most of my growth on a 'bro split' It allows for more volume per muscle group whilst keeping the workouts relatively short (no more than an hour) whereas as on a full body or PPL there is no where to go volume wise past a certain point as the workouts get too long and any extra volume turns into 'junk' volume as well as impeding recovery due to systematic fatigue .
It's also worth noting that if programmed well (so there is no overlap of muscle groups) your muscles are getting stimulus twice a week, such as if I hit shoulders on a Monday with 16 hard sets, my front delts are getting some stimulus when I hit chest during the week as well as my rear delts when I hit back,
Enough stimulus to 'top up' yet not enough stimulus to count as volume for shoulders or impact recovery, much the same for biceps and triceps.
The pros and cons are that you get to spend a full hour (or however long) punishing that one muscle group. it's a pro or a con depending on how you like to train?
Ultimately so long as programmed well and balancing out the same volume over the month and keeping intensity it all works, whether you're hitting a muscle group once every other day or once every 10 days. Just find what you enjoy the most, that enables you to stay consistent, even if that means cycling from say PPL to a bro split every few weeks or any other type of split