brooksy3434
New member
are there any specific exercises or workout routines in general that are better for overall chest mass? any help would be much appreciated. thx
I am going to tell you my take on it, Fritzer is probably going to come on here an disagree with me, lol. I think inclines should be the bulk of your pressing, especially if you have longer arms. I find they work my pecs much more than flats. I also have always liked heavy bent arm flys. I do alot of flat work now as i compete and my chest is definately not as big as it was when incline was the bulk of my work. The things that are not as big now from powerlifting is my chest and bis, that is about it.
I alway do my pressing first. i also rotate incline decline flat, and narrow grips in. for mass, keep those reps low and push some heavy weight with a full range of motion. Personally, i love dbs over bars as the bars tear my shoulders up. just push as heavy weight as you can bt 4-8 reps for 2 sets and you should grow. good luck
only two sets? is that for every exercise I do or just the main pressing one for the workout?
thanks, its gonna suck switching over to inclines, I put up less than half the weight but I guess I will suck it up
1-6 reps for strength, 7-10 for hypertrophy, 11+ for endurance. 3-5 sets of each exercise.
does anyone know if touching ur chest or going 90 deg makes a difference as far as muscle fibers torn goes? ive been told going lower than 90 implements ur shoulders instead of pecs
does anyone know if touching ur chest or going 90 deg makes a difference as far as muscle fibers torn goes? ive been told going lower than 90 implements ur shoulders instead of pecs
I get a really nice burn when I do cable cross-overs (cable fly's)... Pulley's adjusted to the floor... Keep the motion short but let out real slow then come in quicker and really focusing the squeeze on your chest... Then out real slow using your chest to control your outward arm speed. If you feel it more in your shoulder area, you are using too much weight. Oh and keep your arms close to your chest... Sort of like you are hugging a really skinny girl real hard lol.
If you go on YouTube, you can check out the chest video's by Scooby. That guy has a really wicked chest and has some killer chest work out video's on there that actually work.
does anyone know if touching ur chest or going 90 deg makes a difference as far as muscle fibers torn goes? ive been told going lower than 90 implements ur shoulders instead of pecs
The only thing i can say about this is i work out at a gym that is famous for its bodybuilders and its bodybuilding history, i see pros and tons of competitors regularly, i have never ever seen anyone stop at 90 degrees. Now to build up the bottom portion of my bench some say to build shoulders and some say to build your chest, so i guess who knows. But i am a firm beleiver in doing things full range. Your not going to lose that way. Now i have stated forever that i feel the incline is a better chest builder and i can literally feel the stretch in my pecs at the bottom, i am not sure why it would be much different on a bech, the only difference seems to be the range of motion is less on a bench, so i would think touching the chest is even more important.
Going down more than 90 degree's is going to stretch your pecs out more. But if you don't want to work your delts that much or have rotator cuff issues, etc... then don't do it. If I stopped at 90 degree's the bar would be like 10" from my chest... Locking out is useless as well. You just end up putting all that weight on your elbow joints then. You are better off coming up to just before lock out and holding that for a second then return down. That will work your tri's more.
Next time I am benching, I'm going to try and do like half benches.. basically coming all the way down to my chest but then only lifting up until my chest isn't involved any more.. I mean, your chest only resists the weight coming down.. It doesn't really help much in the lift other than to stabilize... At least I don't feel my chest doing much in the lift. I feel the burn when I am bringing the weight back down.
I really agree with most of this. Mostly the first paragraph. Your chest does act as a stabalizer muscle during the flat bench, and yes the negative (eccentric) movement is what results in DOMS, which is torn muscle fibers- which is what bodybuilders desire to achieve. However, I think you should try to use a heavier than usual weight on flat bench next time and only lower the bar halfway to your chest then back to almost lockout. Do this however many reps you would normally do for your main set. This method works a different portion/head of the pec muscle. You can switch and do it the way you described also- to work different heads of the muscle (mostly the outer area)
does anyone know if touching ur chest or going 90 deg makes a difference as far as muscle fibers torn goes? ive been told going lower than 90 implements ur shoulders instead of pecs
Why do you have to hit it from all angles? Why can't you just 'hit it'. If you stimulate the muscle, then bingo. Done deal.
That kinda logic is what I see from dudes at my gym that think it's necessary to do lat pulldowns with about 4 different grips. "Dude, this grip works my lats in tight... this grip works my lats wide... this grip works my lats right in the middle..." Just find which motion, grip, exercise, whatever, that stimulates the body part that you are going for and do it up.
Good point about the hypertrophy rep range, no doubt.
Can't get a nicely shaped chest with just one angle. Sure, you can build it up with flat bench, but if you want nice definition you should hit it from every angle. Just my personal .02
True but you need to concentrate on overall mass before definition.