An interesting new study comparing the muscular strength, size and endurance of 2 groups who either (a) progressed the number of repetitions they could do or (b) progressed the load they were lifting, found that there was very little difference between either group. Both are valid ways to develop strength and hypertrophy.
A link to the study: https://peerj.com/articles/14142/
A link to a YouTube video discussing the study:
The reason I want to share this with r/bodyweighfitness is because I think the findings could be applied to the RR. It is far less consistent to progress in bodyweight movements than it is to add weight onto barbells. While some progressions transition smoothly, others involve a significant increase in difficulty.
This study indicates that rather than trying to move from 8 reps of exercise 'Y' to 5 reps of exercise 'Z', people could continue getting bigger and stronger with exercise 'Y' all the way up to 30 reps if they want to. It doesn't necessarily need to be a specific number each time you change exercise.
Obviously I'm not promoting the idea of doing 100+ reps per set, but I often see comments here claiming that anything over 10 reps is wasted. Even this post linked from the FAQ claims that 4/5ths of 50 reps of push ups would be better spent working on diamond push ups. In reality that ratio is more likely to be 2/5ths.
(p.s. I have no personal connection to the study or the youtuber, so this isn't an advertisement or self-promotion)
A link to the study: https://peerj.com/articles/14142/
A link to a YouTube video discussing the study:
The reason I want to share this with r/bodyweighfitness is because I think the findings could be applied to the RR. It is far less consistent to progress in bodyweight movements than it is to add weight onto barbells. While some progressions transition smoothly, others involve a significant increase in difficulty.
This study indicates that rather than trying to move from 8 reps of exercise 'Y' to 5 reps of exercise 'Z', people could continue getting bigger and stronger with exercise 'Y' all the way up to 30 reps if they want to. It doesn't necessarily need to be a specific number each time you change exercise.
Obviously I'm not promoting the idea of doing 100+ reps per set, but I often see comments here claiming that anything over 10 reps is wasted. Even this post linked from the FAQ claims that 4/5ths of 50 reps of push ups would be better spent working on diamond push ups. In reality that ratio is more likely to be 2/5ths.
(p.s. I have no personal connection to the study or the youtuber, so this isn't an advertisement or self-promotion)