Hey Joe
Well, don't worry about sounding like anything. It's never a shame to ask - it's a shame to
not ask and then find out that you've been doing something wrong for a long time simply because you didn't bother to ask.

that would be a kick in the butt, wouldn't it?
I offer pretty much the same advice as Dan. I personally prefer doing compounds, then an additional isolation depending on the phase of my cycle and if it's lagging or needs additional work.
[b said:
Quote[/b] ]However I use the lat side raise b/c I feel my front delts get hit enough using bench. So HST experts correct me if I am wrong here...is it just as beneficial to drop the isolations year round and stick with all compounds?
I'm not an expert, sorry. For now, you'll just have to be satisfied with me. But don't worry, Fausto and Dan will be here sure enough shortly
So anyhoo... well, don't just drop the isolations year round. That's not exactly the point. They're not always useless exercises. The controversy surrounding them is more on how people fail to use them correctly, or rely on them too much.
Whether they will be useful or not depends on
1) Purpose
2) Workout Routine
3) Other training circumstances like rep phase
4) The isolation movement's stretch and load.
(This list isn't in order of importance or anything. I just enumerated them)
Purpose - what do you want to accomplish? If your purpose in doing a ton of isolation movements is to a thinking similar to "I wanna put emphasis on ALL body parts to make them grow like crazy!!!" (in other words, overall appearance), err... you should be doing big compounds and not tiring yourself and slowing down your recovery by adding more and more isolations to the mix. What's a good purpose and what's not? You can go back and read Jules' take on that matter.
Workout Routine - how many compounds are you doing? What movements are these? How hard do they hit the different muscle groups? Is the overlap good enough? If yes, then adding isolations may simply add nothing more to the muscle and, in fact, may hinder you a little by slowing down your recovery and/or fatiguing you more needlessly. If no, then isolations would be useful.
Other training circumstances - what rep phase are you in? If your main moves are compounds and you have very little else, will those movements in the earlier phases (say 15's or early 10RM) be enough? Or do you need to make certain muscle groups do an additional exercise because the compounds aren't heavy yet, so other participating muscle groups in the movemnt may not be hit enough and you could do with a little more recruitment, hence a good time to add an extra isolation.
Stretch and load - this is obvious, isn't? After you answer all the above guidelines and you say "yep, I need to do an extra isolation or two", then figure out what iso you want to do taking into consideration it's ROM/stretch and load.
In my opinion only, do the isolation movements during the start of your cycle because this is when your compound movements are lighter - perhaps certain participating muscle groups like biceps and triceps could use more recruitment, so why not add them now? By the time you go to the 5's, hey, the biceps and triceps will be exposed to greater load in the compounds, so we might not need them there.
But don't start them off using light loads. Although you start them early in the cycle, use a heavy load. I can't say how much, this isn't a strict rule. I'd say do something like your 10RM, or maybe heavier.
As for the stretch, a good idea (and again just my opinion), since you start heavy on the isolation while your compounds are still light (to increase recruitment) would be to choose an isolation with regular stretch only (again, since the compounds aren't heavy yet but we start the iso heavy), then when you max out the iso exercise, you'll probably be jsut starting out with your heavy compounds. When that happens, instead of stopping your isolation exercise, you can still do a little of it, this time using a different exercise that has significantly more stretch. For example, you start heavy on regular curls. When you max out on this, it's already getting really heavy on your compounds anyway, so you drop this particular exercise and instead do an incline dumbbell curl - although you'll be dealing with less weight (since you already maxed out on your curl), you'll be getting more stretch, which is exactly what you need now since the compounds will probably overload your arms already anyway now that these compounds are heavy already.
Hope that helps

-JV