@Arghmatey: what if you successfully induced a decent PS response in the targeted muscle in your first session in the day? Then, any further sessions would be adding very little in the way of a possible increased PS response (summation effect) but they would be burning up calories which could be put to better use for recovery and growth.
So, if you're specialising on your bis, I would start with a single session a day where you hit a target rep count of around 20-40 reps (depending on load). Use a load progression over a cycle. Add negative-accentuated reps in towards the heavy end of the cycle (cheat bb curl reps, a la O&G, are good for that; assisted one-arm db curls are an alternative). Emphasise the stretch in the bis during the eccentrics.
Dan Moore's Max-Stim protocol can come in handy too. Similar to the old rest-pause technique, it is a good way to continue to increase the strain (in a good way) on the muscle tissue through additional load at the heavy end of a cycle, while keeping volume up and CNS fatigue under control. You can use loads around your 3-5 RM for a good 20 reps this way, without feeling as if you've just BBQ'd yourself!
For bi specialisation, two sessions a day like this would probably be as much as anyone would ever need. It might be overkill.
I might choose different bi exercises for each session if I did two-a-day. Also, whether you did one or two sessions-a-day, doing it 6 days a week would very likely be too much. Every other day would be worth a try though.
So, if you're specialising on your bis, I would start with a single session a day where you hit a target rep count of around 20-40 reps (depending on load). Use a load progression over a cycle. Add negative-accentuated reps in towards the heavy end of the cycle (cheat bb curl reps, a la O&G, are good for that; assisted one-arm db curls are an alternative). Emphasise the stretch in the bis during the eccentrics.
Dan Moore's Max-Stim protocol can come in handy too. Similar to the old rest-pause technique, it is a good way to continue to increase the strain (in a good way) on the muscle tissue through additional load at the heavy end of a cycle, while keeping volume up and CNS fatigue under control. You can use loads around your 3-5 RM for a good 20 reps this way, without feeling as if you've just BBQ'd yourself!
For bi specialisation, two sessions a day like this would probably be as much as anyone would ever need. It might be overkill.
I might choose different bi exercises for each session if I did two-a-day. Also, whether you did one or two sessions-a-day, doing it 6 days a week would very likely be too much. Every other day would be worth a try though.
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