uvawahoowa
Well-known member
Planning a lean bulk, trying to figure out what type of cardio to do. Either HIIT 2x/wk, LISS 3x/wk, or maybe HIIT 1x/wk & LISS 2x/wk? Just curious how many people do HIIT on a bulk? If so, what are your intervals?
Planning a lean bulk, trying to figure out what type of cardio to do. Either HIIT 2x/wk, LISS 3x/wk, or maybe HIIT 1x/wk & LISS 2x/wk? Just curious how many people do HIIT on a bulk? If so, what are your intervals?
I'd like to bump this.. I know it is preference... I find HIIT to be most effective for me... Yet I do enjoy a nice long incline walk in sweats and a hoodie to just drench out excess fluids and get some low intensity calorie burning.
I'm gonna be lifting 3x a week on a new program in jan and I'm trying to decide how I want to set up my cardio... I've been doing 10 minute sessions of 30 second on/30 off of HIIT post workout and really like the metabolic effects after a tough lift... But when on a "bulk" I'm not sure if I want to do any cardio post workout...
I will be lifting Monday, Wed, and Friday
Can either do HIIT 2x a week on off days
Or do HIIT 3x a week on lift days with LISS once or twice a week on off days.
Sat and Sunday r for rest and relaxation so I am limiting myself to a 5 day schedule.
So what are the general thoughts on how much cardio / the type/ when
How much, what type, and when you do cardio are entirely dependent on YOU. If you are trying to gain muscle mass I would recommend doing it on the days you're not lifting - HIIT is ideal and if it's the "most effective" for you then go for it. I currently lift Monday, Wednesday, Friday and do ~20 minutes of HIIT Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday. All dependent on YOU. Play around with it if you want to see what gets you the best results for your GOALS.
~Rosie~
There are many questions here. Which is best for fat loss, which hampers muscle growth or strength gain?
Modality and duration are two of the most important influencing factors of concurrent training.
I go over a large base of research in this video for anyone who wants some more in depth answers.
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHza-69ghCc">YouTube Link</a>
Lol it's funny bc I feel so silly goin to the gym for 20 minutes! But yea.. That is the best way I can think of to gain muscle and keep fat at bay/possibly recomp
Planning a lean bulk, trying to figure out what type of cardio to do. Either HIIT 2x/wk, LISS 3x/wk, or maybe HIIT 1x/wk & LISS 2x/wk? Just curious how many people do HIIT on a bulk? If so, what are your intervals?
HIIT bicycling. Yes, it will disturb recovery the first few weeks. Thereafter, it will actually accelerate progress by building up the mitochondrial capacity of the legs.
There are many questions here. Which is best for fat loss, which hampers muscle growth or strength gain?
Modality and duration are two of the most important influencing factors of concurrent training.
I go over a large base of research in this video for anyone who wants some more in depth answers.
HIIT bicycling. Yes, it will disturb recovery the first few weeks. Thereafter, it will actually accelerate progress by building up the mitochondrial capacity of the legs.
The cardio I did, I did on cut. But what I found is still on a severe calorie cut and doing weights 3-5 times a week my calves, gluts, and quads got huge and cut. So this whole "zomg cardio=tard4gainz, you gonnaBcatabolic" parroting is bull. You can put on muscle even with cardio, regardless. You just have to backfill your cals.
Does this make alot of sense for most? Maybe not. But for IFers it makes perfect sense, burning the most amount during fast window, back loading cals post workout for protien synthesis.
Better for weight loss (Muscle included), then it is for hypertrophy. Also it's much easier to get results in untrained individuals no matter what your approach is. If you take someone doing next to nothing then put them on plan x, they will inevitably have improvements regardless of whether or not the program is optimal.
I run 9 miles a day (in an hour), largely fasted.
I run 9 miles a day (in an hour), largely fasted. Am I still "untrained"?![]()
Sounds fun... Why do you do this?
Habit from cut cycle. Starting to back it down and do less cardio, more weight training. But part of me doesn't want to give up vo2 max![]()
Effect of intensity of aerobic training on VO2max.
METHODS:
Sixty-one health young adult subjects were matched for sex and VO2max and were randomly assigned to a moderate- (50% VO2 reserve (VO2R), vigorous (75% VO2R), near-maximal-intensity (95% VO2R), or a nonexercising control group. Intensity during exercise was controlled by having the subjects maintain target HR based on HR reserve. Exercise volume (and thus energy expenditure) was controlled across the three training groups by varying duration and frequency. Fifty-five subjects completed a 6-wk training protocol on a stationary bicycle ergometer and pre- and posttesting. During the final 4 wk, the moderate-intensity group exercised for 60 min, 4 d.wk the vigorous-intensity group exercised for 40 min, 4 d.wk and the near-maximal-intensity group exercised 3 d.wk performing 5 min at 75% VO2R followed by five intervals of 5 min at 95% VO2R and 5 min at 50% VO2R.
RESULTS:
VO2max significantly increased in all exercising groups by 7.2, 4.8, and 3.4 mL.min.kg in the near-maximal-, the vigorous-, and the moderate-intensity groups, respectively. Percent increases in the near-maximal- (20.6%), the vigorous- (14.3%), and the moderate-intensity (10.0%) groups were all significantly different from each other (P < 0.05). There were no significant changes in resting HR and BP in any group.
CONCLUSION:
When volume of exercise is controlled, higher intensities of exercise are more effective for improving VO2max than lower intensities of exercise in healthy, young adults.
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