<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">Because you're limited in the amount of weight you can use with moderate to high rep sets. Hypertrophy is an important component of strength, but so is neural efficiency. Getting better at high rep/low load sets has limited carryover to pure strength. Eventually you need some work with loads heavier than you can use for high reps with conventional sets.</div>
Thats why when someone says, rep range is unimportant, it makes absolutely no sense to me.
Everyone up to this point says, the first two mesocycles are in preperation for the 5's. By your own comment, high load, low reps is for strength, most people believe that. HST is about hypertrophy.
This is why I asked this question, why is rep range unimportant? I keep getting the answer its not, yet when I ask for detail, I get explanations as to how rep ranges affect you differently. So the true answer is, rep ranges do effect how your body responds to the load. Instead of doing a vanilla HST routine where your basically prepping for the end load (5's). If you do macrocycles as they are called, wouldnt this take full advantage of each rep range. Because if you keep pointing to the 5's as the key to hypertrophy, it becomes fuzzy, as 5's are for strength. If I read the HST principles correctly, its the submax weight that sparks continual growth, yet everyone has this fixation on the 5's, hey I like them too but Im thinking more attention should be paid to other rep ranges. As the body responds differently to different rep ranges.
Something else the quoted statement doesnt take into consideration, you may be handling lighter weight, but your still at your rep max for that rep range, the weight wont feel any lighter when your handling your RM load and sneaking up on the last few reps.
If Im to believe what is being stated, then all I have to do, is go grab more weight than I lifted the last lifting day, do as many reps as I can comfortably, stop. Next workout, grab a little more weight, do as many reps as possible, comfortably, stop. Repeat as needed, when I feel Im pushing my body too far, stop, take a break for a week or two, look at my records, go back mid cycle, find the weight I lifted, lift it as many reps as possible comfortably, then add a little more every workout after that. As any specific rep range is unimportant.
Anyone speak hillbilly and can translate what Im saying?
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I have a copyright on microcycles, so.....haha
You sure about that? </div>
Stop eyeballin my chicken.