MrKleen73
Legend
Absolutely there is! TUT, and negatives are both excellent for growth, however they aren't a part of this plan.But there’s still something to be said for time under tension, which is significantly greater in the first approach assuming solid form. But yeah, if you’re just doing RP for a primary exercise and then some straight sets for accessories it’s a useful technique.
You absolutely do not have any need to do any straight sets other than dead lifts and rows (which is mandated in the program) to grow at an accelerated pace. Trust me you, well most people will grow plenty just following DC as it is written. Especially hard gainers who need to use as little energy as possible in an effort to grow.
Did you run DC as written and not get good results? Is that why you mention adding on to it? Once you add on it is no longer DC and is actually going against why DC is written as it is.
If one wanted to they could easily do DC with a 4-0-2 tempo, however it would not likely increase the efficacy of the program and more likely opposite. They are 2 different hypertrophy inducing strategies being employed, one requires lower volume due to it's intensity level, and the other require high volume to make up for lower intensity. DC relies on explosive lifting, and increasing the thickness of the muscle fiber itself or contractile proteins. It is about minimizing overall volume while pushing the intensity to always beat the log book. Adding more volume and slower tempos would skew the specificity of the program which is what it relies on.
Better way IMHO would be run the DC as written for a while then run a volume based or TUT based program to hit hypertrophy via different avenues of stimulation. I had amazing results going from a very high volume plan down to DC, then did really well coming off of DC into German Volume Training. The reason is hitting different avenues of hypertrophy from mechanical, to Metabolic and Damage inducing. While focusing on strength and growth the contractile protein thickens. Then focusing on metabolic & damage inducing strategies tends to add more volume to the muscle cell due to the higher need for energy stores within the muscle.
Should help, and will most likely be a welcome change once you get used to the scheme.Thanks! And thanks TheSolution
I do a ton of overall volume. I believe I will altar my training style to RP. My joints will surely thank me.
Certainly slow negatives do far more muscle damage than any other type of rep. They cause a lot of hypertrophy, but you want to do them in a balance as well. TUT lifting actually lowers you insulin sensitivity by bringing less GLUT-4 to the muscle cell surface during training... continued training like that teaches the body to send less Glut4 translocators to the surface. Alternatively Explosive lifting increases the amount of GLUT-4 translocators are brought to the surface of the muscle cell to carry nutrients into the cell. So a period of slow tempo lifting should be followed with some explosive training to start increasing the insulin sensitivity again.I grew quickly on TUT. Probably the most painful training style I have done. Have taken a break from TUT lately.