Saturday, September 20, 2025

Single Door Garage Training: Early Westside - Gary Benford (1980)


The author. 
Here's more from Benford, the first article on this blog.


A bottomless pit filled with rabbit holes leading to joy as well as sorrow began here. Looking back from one such hole, the man smiled and was happy. 

This article deals with the environment and training methods used by some individuals I have recently come into contact with. Oftentimes a change in scenery from one locale of the country causes difficulty in adjusting to new faces and even more difficulty in maintaining or even improving one's lifting total. Well, I experienced both upon moving from the Pittsburgh area to Columbus, Ohio this past June (1979). This was the result of job and professional advancement. Irregardless, I was immediately in search of capable training partners and environment to supplement my "other" interest.

In September I met Lou Simmons. Having never seen him before, I was somewhat startled at his appearance as I was also by the training methods used by him and his lifters. This is the topic of the article.

Before going any further, it is necessary to define the title. We train in a single door garage. It has, in some parts, a floor. The holes within supply us with an access to view the outside world from inside and the cobwebs serve notice to the length of time unnecessities have gone unnoticed to further the primary search for strength.

The garage comes complete with two dogs. Two lights that identify each of us from one another and an array of characters who participate. The first person to mention, Louie Simmons, has already been identified. I thought my knowledge in the area of strength was capable to others, till I met him. His prowess in lifting is already known. However, the methods in which this occurs is altogether unknown.

Each of us, who number 12 in all, have used these methods, and have all increased significantly. Other members of the garage include a lifter whose facial appearance and sometimes verbal exchanges parallels extreme youth, individuals of extreme academic intelligence whose actions do not merit such reward, individuals expert in probing the mind those of the aesthetic outward appearance, one with a flair for his hair which sometimes stops progress in the garage, shotputters, women athletes, and just a lot of STRONG PEOPLE. Being that there is no heat outside of that supplied by an inside fuel heater, a heave upwards of the garage door sometimes resembles the primitive caveman huddling around an open fire.


Squatting

The method used to squat is termed as BOX SQUATS. To box squat, the individual lowers himself to a box height of approximately two inches above parallel and sits down on the box. It is almost a complete stop, except for arch in the lower back which enables one to rock backwards and immediately thrust the hips and buttocks forward to an upward position again. Upon using singles only to work up to, one can handle tremendous amounts of weight.

After this is complete, another box height of approximately 1/2 inch below parallel is used and the procedure repeats itself.

All weights are taken with a wide stance to utilize the powerful muscles of the hip extensors.

Another box approximately two inches below parallel may be used occasionally to supplement depth strength.

Box squatting is performed once per week, attempting to best personal records every week.


Bench Pressing
 
Bench presses are performed once per week in a power rack utilizing singles both 2 and 4 inches off the chest. The second day of benching is performed using a wide grip working up to one set of five repetitions, increasing 10 pounds per week back-tracking up to a contest. Four weeks before a contest an individual increases up to 20 pounds for a one week jump followed by three consecutive weeks of 10 pound jumps utilizing 3 reps per set. On this same day of wide grip benching, the lifter performs close grip benches for a maximal set of 5 reps, trying to push arm strength ahead of bench press strength.


Deadlifting

Deadlifting is performed once per week. This is done in a power rack by pulling heavy weights for singles at various pin heights off the floor on a rotating basis. Week one would be pin four and three, week two would be pin two and one, week three would be off the floor and standing on a box of 4 inches.

However, the most unnoticed exercise is the Reverse Hyperextension. This is done by lifting the upper body over a leg extension machine, or better yet by lying boards approximately 3 feet off the ground in the power rack and using it. The body is bent at the waist and the legs dangle on the floor. The lifter then raises his legs and hips up behind him as high as possible contracting the lower back and gluteal muscles, performing as many reps as possible. Weights are usually attached to the ankles and provide resistance. We use on of our precision dog collars.


A sample week routine would look like this:

Monday -
Pin DL, singles from 4/3 pin, or 2/1 pin, or floor and 4" deficit.
Reverse Hyperextensions.

Wednesday -
Power Rack BP singles.

Friday -
Box Squat, singles, box 2 and 1.
Reverse Hyperextensions.

Sunday -
Wide Grip BP
Close Grip BP

Let me emphatically say that this routine does work.

Friday, September 19, 2025

Optimal Training Zones - Tom Kubistant






And now . . . for somethings completely not different. 


A quick joke before the article: 

How many somethings does it take to yank a chain? 
Three Volkswagens! 


  Love the pumps! 

said the b-builder.

In bodybuilding as well as in the rest of our daily activities, we have what I call an optimal zone of functioning. Once in this zone, we can attain effective results with a minimal amount of stress and strain. The optimal training zone provides the base for consistent gains.

Achieving an optimal training zone requires less effort than many believe. An example is in order. Today's cars are designed and engineered so that their optimal zone of functioning is around 50 to 55 miles per hour. In this zone the car achieves good results (speed) with efficiency (good gas mileage) and little wear and tear on the parts. Sure, I can "push the pedal to the metal" and go 90 miles per hour. This is called a maximal level of functioning. At this speed I achieve better results (getting somewhere quicker), but with less fuel economy, more wear-and-tear on the parts, and an increased chance of having an accident or seeing those little red revolving lights in my rear-view mirror.

In our lifting we want to have an optimal level of functioning. In this zone we attain results by allowing our muscles to work together and recuperate fully. We need a sufficient amount of intensity to bring us up into this zone. If we fail to do this, we are not getting much out of our training and are really just going through the motions.

Once we are in this optimal zone of training we need to use just enough intensity so that we can remain in this zone. If we apply too much intensity, we will cross over a fine line that pushes us beyond this optimal zone so that we really work against ourselves. The trick to training intensity is to find out where you fine lives are and to stay just short of them. Something like this:

Trying Too Hard, Working Against Yourself
     ------------- fine line-----------------
Optimal Training Zone
--------------------------------------------
Sub-Optimal Functioning



Now, I do not want to give the impression that this optimal zone of training intensity is not demanding. Quite often this zone is very demanding and might approach 90% of a maximum effort. Once in this zone you can effectively and safely stimulate your muscles and give them a chance to strengthen. As your muscles strengthen over the course of weeks and months, you can progressively elevate this optimal zone higher and higher. This is the format of intelligent training. 





Staying in your optimal training zone also helps you endure long workouts. It makes sense that the more efficient you are in your energy expenditures, the longer you can sustain your efforts. Lifters who exceed their optimal training zones by being too intense and trying too hard waste precious energy, so they have little of it at the end of the workout. Appropriate intensity means both focusing in as well as sustaining quality efforts.

Granted, there are times when you may want to push yourself beyond your optimal zone and give a maximum effort. However, it must be understood that your success in these maximal lifts depends on developing the strength, technique and resiliency from consistent training in optimal zones of functioning. A true max effort also implies that you will have to take some time out to recuperate and go back into your optimal zone so that you can build again.

Maximal efforts are challenging and exhilarating indicators of progress that cap off weeks of hard training. However, do not lose sight of the fact that maximal efforts are based on a series of consistent optimal efforts. Achieving these optimal zones of training provides you with the strength and balance to attempt maximal attempts.




Like our muscles, our concentration has various ranges of motion. Versatile and enduring concentration is dependent on being able to zoom in and out. At one end of the concentration spectrum is the narrow, pinpoint focus called ATTENTION. At the other end of the spectrum is the broad and expansive form of concentration called AWARENESS.  Attention is more of an active process that expends energy in a directed way (for example, "paying attention"), while awareness is more of a receptive process that provides perspective and endurance (for example, "becoming aware"). Both attention and awareness are crucial in concentration during our workouts. We need to pay attention to the specific muscles being worked in order to achieve the best stimulation. However, we must also be aware of how one muscle group relates to another so we can achieve balance and proportion of effort. 

At various times during our training we need to emphasize each form of concentration. For example, during a set I want to pay very specific attention to the muscles I am working so I can stay appropriately intense, giving optimal stimulation with minimal risk of injury. During warmups, breaks, evaluating my performance or physique, I would want to to be aware of the interplay between muscle groups to learn how they influence one another so I can improve my overall symmetry and efficiency of movement. 

We can liken attention and awareness to a telephoto lens on a camera. Sometimes we need to zoom in to pick up specific details while other times we need to zoom out in order to take in the big picture. In the same way, we can zoom our concentration in and out to make it more adaptable, appropriate, enduring, and complete.


Control 

In bodybuilding and lifting, control is the name of the game. I am sure we have all seen novices of show-offs in the gym who quickly bang the weights down with a crash, thinking they are getting a good workout. During the bench press, for example, they strain to get the weight up and then drop the bar back down on their chest. The result is that instead of developing the shoulder girdle they get bruised and eventually injured. 

These people do not understand that a muscle can be fully stimulated only by a series of controlled movements. Controlling the muscle effectively means that you have to concentrate exclusively on what you are doing. How can you control your muscles or the lift if you can't even control your own thinking? Effective concentration implies that you have to be in control.

Some advanced bodybuilders or lifters take this notion of control a couple of steps further so that they strive to tune in so fully with the muscles being worked or the lift itself that their consciousness is actually in those muscles or that lift. They get to the point where they identify so strongly with the muscles being worked or the lift that their identity is that muscle or that lift. This is the hallmark of lifting concentration.

Psychologists have a fancy name for this process. They call it locus of control. This essentially means that only you can influence you. You are the captain of your metaphorical lifting ship and only you can chart the course to your development.

Locus of control implies that no one can make you mad, distracted, frustrated, or even intense. You make yourself that way. Or you can allow someone -- or some thing -- else to do it to you. In either case, at some level of your consciousness you are deciding to allow other people or other things to influence you.

I do not have control of everything in the gym. I don not have control of the blaring music, the woman who is using the equipment I want to use, some idiot repeatedly banging the weights down, or other such distractions. However, I do have complete control of how I react to those distractions. I can allow myself to get all wrapped up in them, or I can tune in to the next set I need to perform.

Now, all of us become distracted at times. The important thing is to get back on course as quickly as possible. In this way, you can maximize what you can control, namely your muscles and your lifts.

On one hand, effective concentration is really tuning in to yourself to focus your mental and physical energies in an intense way. On the other hand, effective concentration is staying in charge of yourself and controlling what you can control.


The System of Concentrating

Okay, you now know more about concentration than you ever did before (or perhaps ever wanted to know!). The next step is effectively applying these concepts.

First, you must convince yourself of the necessity of concentrating during a workout. Sure, it takes a little more energy to concentrate as opposed to spacing out, becoming constantly distracted, or mindlessly going through the motions, but the results you achieve will be well worth it.

In order to help convince yourself of the necessity of concentration, ask yourself, "What do I go to the gym to do?" If your answer is "to have some fun" or "to meet people," fine, but don't expect to achieve steady gains. If your answer is, "to train," good, but realize that in order to maximize your time and energy while in the gym you have to concentrate on what you are there to do.

It's helpful to plan your workouts ahead of time and prepare to apply yourself intensely. As you are getting to the gym, changing, or warming up, start narrowing down your attention to what you want to accomplish. And then go about doing it. 

Realize that your workouts will rarely go as planned and there will always be distractions. Get back on course as quickly as possible. By keeping your mind on the tasks at hand, you will soon find that you are getting better workouts in less time. 

At first, concentrating for long periods of time may be difficult. Take heart in the fact that the more you exercise your concentration, the stronger and more sustained it will become. Sound familiar?

Continually focus your mental camera and zoom in (pay attention to specific muscle groups) or zoom out (become aware of the interrelationships between muscles and overall balance). Use your mental magnifying glass to focus your mental and physical energies so intensely that your muscles sizzle and your lifts are all crisp (as in, that 315 is toast, or, crisp, as in a high-weight snatch that seems take you along for the ride). Your workouts will then be more concentrated.

Review the key points below, which are essential to effective concentration. Put a check by the points you understand and put a star by those points you have to get a better handle on and practice.

_________ 1.) Remember that concentration is a narrowing of your mental focus.

_________2. ) Always be a Doer instead of a Tryer.

_________3.) Have specific plans for each training session. For example, plan for the specific muscle groups you want to work (or movements - push, pull, squat, press), the sequence of exercises you want to do, the sets and reps and specific techniques you want to use.

_________4.) Channel your intensity as you would direct the sun's rays through a magnifying glass.

_________5.) Stay within yourself.

_________6.) Learn what an optimal training zone is for you and stay within it. This is the only way to remain as intense near the end of your workout as you were in the beginning.

_________7.) Learn how to effectively zoom your concentration in and out between attention and awareness.

_________8.) Focus only on what you can control, specifically, your muscles and the next rep or attempt. 

_________9.) Keep in mind that properly practicing your concentration will strengthen it, both in intensity as well as endurance.


Next: Staying Motivated


Fred R. Howell











Thursday, September 18, 2025

Thoughts on Arm Training, Part Two - Greg Zulak (1984)



 Jeff King




A lot of guys still believe that if you follow Arnold's routine you get arms like Arnold's, or if you follow Larry Scott's routine you'll get arms like Scott's. 

Of course this is a ridiculous notion and simply isn't true. Your individual genes and bone structure determine your potential muscle size, shape and length, so training merely develops the arms you have the potential to have and nothing else. 

You can accentuate certain muscles to give the appearance of altering your muscle shape but usually the change is slight and you're stuck with the shape you have. 

If you have a short bicep and a gap at the elbow then doing Preacher Curls will probably only lengthen the bicep ever so slightly if at all, and if you don't have the potential for a big split biceps peak then all the concentration curls in the world won't give you a peak like Boyer Coe, Robbie Robinson or Al Beckles. It will improve a bit in some lifters. If peak could be built don't you think that Sergio Oliva or Chris Dickerson would have found a way? 

This doesn't mean you shouldn't try to improve. If your biceps are short, by all means do preacher curls, lying DB curls and reverse curls to try and fill in the gap. 

If your biceps are flat then concentrate on dumbbell and bentover barbell concentration curls, alternate dumbbell curls with supination and spider curls with barbell or dumbbells done at a 90-degree angle. 

One of the very best biceps "peakers" is lying lat machine pulldown curls.  Lie on a bench under a lat machine bar, keep your elbows pointing up and curl the bar to your chin in a wide semicircle arc. Really tense the biceps hard for an intense contraction. 

The thing is, how do you know how your arms are going to develop until you try and develop them? Some guys have started out with fairly flat looking biceps and built good peaks, and for others the peak just never comes. But you've got to try to find out. 

Because the arm muscles are small it is usually necessary to gain some muscular body weight in order to add size to them, do diet and an all round training routine is important. 

Here's an interesting four-part article by John McCallum.
"Gain Weight to Build Your Arms" - 

It may not be popular to say but doing squats, bench presses, rows and chins will do as much or more than most actual arm movements to add size. Certainly the man who solely trains his arms would have a difficult time after a while adding size to them, while another man who followed an all around routine that included work for all major muscle groups would be far more successful in the long run and look better too.

Each person is unique and responds differently but generally for each 10-15 pound gain in muscular bodyweight you should add about one inch to your upper arms and close to one half inch to your forearms. (Note: I stress muscular bodyweight -- adding 10 pounds of fat is useless and as mentioned earlier, will just hide your muscularity and make your arms look smaller and less impressive). 

If you are genetically predisposed of big arms or of superior genetics you may gain even more, but if you have poor genetics your gains may be somewhat less. Usually one inch per 10-15 pound gain holds true in most cases. 

No matter how good your genetics are it takes time to build such size. You may gain 20-30 pounds in your first year of training and then 7-10 pounds your next 3-4 years, and then it may be difficult to add even 5 pounds of muscle a year, so to add 4-5 inches will take years.

If you currently have a 14 or 15 inch arm and weigh 160 pounds don't expect to build your arms up to 18 inches some day and still weigh 160 pounds. It's a physical impossibility.

Face it, every "big arm" champ from Park, Pearl, Draper, Scott, Sergio, Arnold, Beckles, etc., are huge people and all weigh over 200 pounds in top shape.

Don't believe that garbage about Mohamed Makkawy, Franco Columbu and Danny Padilla only weighing 170 pounds or so and having 20" arms. It just ain't so. Most arm measurements are grossly exaggerated. 

At last year's Olympia in Munich, Germany, Makkawy's arms were 17.75" but because of his shortness and incredible cuts and symmetry most people would swear his arms were at least 20 inches. Likewise for Danny Padilla. Several years ago Arthur Jones measured Franco Columbu's arms and they measured 16.75 inches cold. These are true measurements. A real 18" arm is huge. 

Remember too that those guys are the elite of the sport; the guys with the best genes. If they can only manage 17 to 17.75 inches [with assistance] should you expect more? Hardly! 

Very, very few guys can build up to a muscular 200 pounds and build a 17 or 18 inch arm let alone build up to a muscular 220 or 230 and have 20 or 21 inch arms. It's rare, believe me.

Even Arnold has his limits. Once he went over 235-240 pounds he started smoothing out and looking fat. Likewise you may find your structure only allows you to weigh 190-200 pounds and anything over that and you lose your shape and cuts and look fat and if you have a small frame even 170-180 may be too much for you, so you'll have to be content with a smaller arm.

But even as 16.5 or 17 inch arm that is well shaped and symmetrical with cuts and separation is far more impressive than a 29 incher of shapeless, smooth bulk. As they say, you can't flex fat. 

I'm not saying not to try and build you arms as large as possible. What I'm trying to tell you is that size is only one quality of good arms and if genetics won't allow you to build big arms, then build the best arms you can by concentrating on the other essential characteristics-- like shape, balance, separation and cuts -- and your arms will still be very impressive.

When you are trying to build your arms it's important not to rest excessively between sets or you'll lose your pump and find it difficult to congest your arms. It may be okay to rest 2 or 3 minutes between heavy sets of squats or deadlifts but for arms I'd suggest a much faster pace -- what Larry Scott and others call 'racing the pump" of about 45-60 seconds between sets.

The pump is proof that you are working the muscle as the body sends more blood into the worked area to carry away waste products and supply nutrients which help to rebuild the muscle.

An old trick is to train your forearms the day after you train biceps, which can "feed' the biceps and brachialis as fresh blood is forced into the area via forearm training. 

This brings up another vital point -- the importance of forearm and brachialis work. There is a definite relationship between the upper and lower arm, for a small, weak lower arm simply cannot support a huge upper arm. You won't have a 20 inch upper arm on a 10 inch lower arm.

Not only will the weaker lower arm hold back development of the upper arm by preventing the use of heavy weights necessary to built the upper arm, but it looks "funny" and throws off your symmetry to have skinny forearms, no matter how impressive your biceps-triceps are.

Most authorities agree that one inch on your forearms is worth about three inches on your upper arms and that forearms being a denser muscle group need higher reps and more pumping to make them respond. 

Because they are difficult to overtrain I suggest you train forearms three or four times per week.

There are many effective forearm exercises like wrist curls, Zottman curls, hammer curls, reverse preacher curls and reverse curls. The reverse curl deserves special mention as it is definitely a size builder and a favorite of almost all the big arm boys. I'd definitely recommend you include it too.

Another important rule for building big arms is to do more triceps work than biceps, for the triceps comprises to-thirds of upper arm mass. Do two triceps exercises for every one biceps movement, unless your arm development and your biceps are less developed. 

When training triceps the most important thing is contraction so you shouldn't use constant tension style training as this denies the triceps work in the fully contracted position. Always go from full extension to full lockout.

Keep in mind that the triceps have three heads so eventually you'll have to do exercises for each head to get full triceps development and get that horseshoe look to the back of your arms.

To hit the side and outer heads try close grip bench press, reverse grip bench press, lying one arm extensions with dumbbell moving across the face, triceps kickbacks and triceps pressdowns with the elbows held wide to the sides.

For the inner and long heads try triceps extensions (seated, flat, decline or incline), dips, triceps dips, one arm extensions and long pulley extensions. The seated triceps extension develops the triceps closer to the elbow than the lying version.

If you're having trouble getting a pump in the triceps then try supersetting, pre-exhaust, one-and-one-halfs, tri-sets, burns (1/4 reps). 

An effective superset for triceps is:

Close grip bench press -> Lying pulley extension
3 x 8-10

or 

Triceps extension -> Triceps dip
3 x 8-10

or

Dips -> Triceps pressdowns
3 x 8-10

Because the arms need a lot of variety and constant shocking to improve, barbells, dumbbells, cable and arm machines should all be used at one time or another, utilizing different training principles, i.e. sometimes straight sets sometimes compound sets. 

One way to shock the arms and get a lot of variety in your arm training is to train the arms three times per week but use different exercises each day. This not only prevents boredom and keeps your enthusiasm up but works the arm from various angles, thus more muscle fiber as well.

For example:

Monday: 

Biceps - 
Barbell curl, alt. DB curl, Machine curl.
Triceps - 
Pullover and press, Dips, Triceps pressdown.
Forearms - 
Reverse curl, wrist curl, reverse wrist curl.

Wednesday: 
Biceps - 
Incline DB curl, Preacher curl, EZ curl
Triceps - 
Seated triceps extension, One arm extension, DB kickback
Forearms - 
Reverse preacher curl, Standing wrist curl, Wrist roller

Friday: 
Biceps - 
Wide grip cheat curl, DB curl, Concentration curl
Triceps - 
Decline EZ extension, Incline EZ extension, Triceps dip
Forearms - 
Zottman curl, Cable wrist curl, DB reverse curl

As I mentioned, some days you could mix things up and use supersets or tri-sets, or else you could follow a system of training for 6 weeks or so like straight sets for 6 weeks and then on to another exercise style. 

Chuck Sipes built big arms, but didn't change exercises too often. He did, however, sometime use different training principles to hit the muscle in a different way.

For example, he'd take two exercises for his biceps and two for his triceps and train them very heavy, constantly adding weight each workout. His routine might look like this: 

Biceps - 
Barbell curl, 6 x 6
Incline DB Curl, 6 x 8
Triceps - 
Lying triceps extension, 6 x 6
Triceps pressdown, 6 x 8

After six weeks he'd switch over to supersets so now his routine would look like this: 

Superset: 
Barbell curl -> Lying triceps extension
6 x 6
Superset: 
Incline DB Curl -> Triceps pressdown
6 x 8

Finally, for his last six weeks he'd switch to compounds or supersetting the same muscle group for an extreme burn and pump: 

Superset: 
Barbell curl -> Incline DB curl
6 x 6-8
Superset: 
Lying triceps extension -> Triceps pressdown
6 x 6-8

Note: you can find much more on Sipes' training approach on this blog. 

Just heavy, basic training but very, very effective. Most guys try and get too fancy and go too many exercises and end up overtraining and losing interest. 

After the third routine Sipes would switch back to a more conventional workout and do mostly straight sets with the accent on heavy weights and strength. I feel you really can't go wrong by cycling your training methods like this, and supersetting is one of the most effective types of arm training you can do.

Another very effective style of training that I feel you can't go wrong with is the Heavy - Light principle; that is, doing a heavy low rep exercise, followed by a lighter high rep exercise or superset to pump up the muscles. The heavy exercises put a heavy load on the muscle, thickening and strengthening the deep muscle fibers, especially the fast twitch kind, as well as thickening and strengthening the bones, tendons and ligaments while the lighter high rep movements hit the slow twitch muscle fibers, and pump the muscle up, build capillaries, and build muscle endurance. 

An effective heavy - light arm routine might be: 

Heavy barbell curl, 4 x 4-6
Superset: 
Preacher curl -> DB curl, 3-4 x 8-12
Close grip bench press, 4 x 6-8
Superset: 
Decline triceps EZ extension -> Triceps pressdown, 3-4 x 8-12
Reverse curl, 4 x 6
Superset:
Preacher reverse curl -> Wrist curl, 3-4 x 12-15

A favorite and most successful arm routine of mine for more advanced trainers, one that was modeled after Larry Scott's somewhat, was as follows: 

One are concentration curl, 3 x 6-8
Tri-set:
Preacher curl -> Barbell curl -> EZ reverse curl, 3-4 x 6-10
Close grip bench press, 5 x 8-12
Decline EZ extension, 4 x 8-10
One arm DB extension (optional), 3 x 8-12
Tri-set: 
Long pulley ext. or Seated triceps ext. -> Triceps pressdown -> Triceps dips
3 x 8-10
Wrist curl, 4 x 15-20

This routine really blew my arms up like no other routine I've ever done. 

Note: Here's some of Larry Scott's advanced arm training stuff, more than likely what he's referring to above:

A third very effective principle that really hits the arms hard is the descending rep or triple drop method. Larry Scott uses a similar method with dumbbells called "down the rack" training, where he starts with say a pair a 60's, does as many reps as he can and then puts down them down and immediately grabs the 50's and repeats until he's gone down the rack and is only using a pair of 20 or 25 pounders. One or two cycles is all that is necessary to really get a terrific pump. 

In triple drop [Note: there will be a full article from this author on Triple Dropping in the future) you can use a barbell and do as many reps as you can, immediately remove some plates and continue on to failure and remove weight a second time and go on to failure again and remove some plates a third time and go on to failure again. It helps if you have training partners to remove the plates for you so you don't put the bar down. Dumbbells also work very well with this.

Because triple dropping is so demanding it is recommended you start with only one exercise per body part for two sets. 

For example:

Triceps - 
Close grip bench press - 2 sets or "cycles", 3 "drops" per set
Biceps - 
Barbell curl, same
Forearms - 
Wrist curl, same. 

After three weeks you can go on to three such triple drop sets per exercise. As with all methods, triple dropping must be made progressively harder or it becomes ineffective, so when you feel you are ready for it, go onto two exercises per body part, two sets of three drops each. i.e. Routine II: 

Triceps - 
Close grip bench press, 2 sets plus 3 drops
Triceps pressdown, 2 sets, 3 drops
Biceps - 
Barbell curl, same
Preacher curl, saame,
Forearms - 
Reverse curl, saaame,
Wrist curl, saaaame

Again when you feel you're up to it you can go on to a third set for each exercise. Routine III, your next level of progression is to do three exercises per body part, two sets of three drops each exercise. 

For example: 

Triceps - 
Close grip bench press, triceps extensions, triceps pressdown
Biceps - 
Barbell curl, preacher curl, concentration curl
Forearms -
Reverse curl, wrist curl, reverse wrist curl

Again when you feel up to it go on to a third set of three drops for each exercise. At this point you're up to nine very intense, demanding setss and it's just about impossible to go beyond nine sets of such training without overtraining. So be certain you're ready and up for it. I wouldn't recommend you go over three tri-sets of triple drops unless your name is King Kong. At this point you are doing (counting each drop set as a set) 12 sets each tri-set or 36 intense, demanding sets for each bodypart!

All of these triple drop routines should be done only twice a week except. This is very advanced training and it should take a long, long time to build up to routines four and five, but to someone who puts forth the necessary effort he should realize some spectacular gains if he eats properly and manages to recuperate. 

How much should you reduce each drop? A good rule of thumb is 10%. 
For example, starting with 100 lbs, the first drop would be to 90 lbs, then 80, and finally 70 on the third drop.

All of these routines should be done to positive failure only but if some animal out there manages to get up to three tri-sets of triple drops per bodypart and wants to intensify even more then he has three options.

The first is to go on to four or five tri-sets of triple drops, but overtraining looms on the horizon. The second option is to add some forced reps and negatives to each set of triple drop. And the third option is to use the 1-1/2 rep system. Do a half rep, lower the bar down and do a full rep. Each 1-1/2 rep counts as one rep. But all of these options increase the already super high intensity and won't be needed by most humans on this planet. I'd pay money to see someone do nine sets of triple drop done in 1-1/2 style, with forced reps and negatives thrown in while being caned by a top and suspended from chains. 

In any case, all of these routines are only suggestions and can be modified to meet your individual needs and preferences. The best rule for success in bodybuilding is to find out what works for you and keep doing it. There's more than one way to build good arms and if you keep plugging away you'll eventually find out what works best for you.

One last word on arm training . . . 

Don't get discouraged if your gains seem to come slow. Don't expect to gain two inches a month and build your arms from a skinny 14" to a muscular 18 in a year. It takes years of hard, constant training to develop great arms. Not everyone had the genetic potential to build such arms anyway and even those who do may not want to put forth the effort needed. 

Keep building your arms 1/8 or 1/4 of an inch at a time, keep to gaining muscle and very little fat, and in a few years your arms will be really impressive. But  remember -- nothing takes the place of time. 

Training hard, eating well and keeping positive, combined with some of the things we've talked about here should take you a long way towards your goal of great arms. 

Remember too . . . you only get out of your training what you put into it. You don't get something for nothing. 

Enjoy Your Lifting!   





 


      



















 

Don't Neglect Your Dumbbell Training, Part One - Bob Hoffman (1947)



Father H.B. Lange coaching.

A little more on him here:

And here's a Father Lange chest training article from 1921:

Thanks for the heads up on this one, John! 

Several years ago, a great guy sent me rough scans of almost every Grimek article published for York. I printed them right away and found 'em finally while the reno here was going on! They're not really ordered well, the pages are in no particular order, BUT, it'll be fun to try to put 'em together and go through them all. 


The strongest and best built men, past and present, have trained regularly with heavy dumbbells. Readers of this magazine (Strength & Health, March 1947), who might be classed as old timers due to their interest over a period of years are familiar with such names as Saxon, Sandow, Nordquest, Apollon, Goerner, Hackenschmidt, Swoboda, Cyr, Steinbach, Miller, Pennel, Curtis, Turck, and Rigoulot. Regular readers, new or old, are familiar with the names, Grimek, Stanko, Leight, Stephan, Bacon, Lauriano, Goodrich, Klein, Paschall, Terlazzo, Terpak, Spellman, Stanczyk, and Davis. 

I had not seen this Arnold photo till today . . . 

Photo taken on the filmset of the TV series
TWO and a half HOUNDS


There is one thing in common between these great old timers, and the best build, the strongest, the champion lifters of the present, and that is heavy dumbbell training. 

In the old days, the famous men of might and muscle trained chiefly with heavy dumbbells. Their reputations as strong men were made far more with the heavy dumbbell than with the barbells. 

This is not funny and in no way connected to the previous photo:

The great strong men of various times set world's records in dumbbell lifting, many of which still stand. As an example, Father Bill Curtis made a record in the two dumbbells curl in 1868 which remains on the books today. 

Yes, Bill Curtis (reincarnate) and the Fatback Band created this hiphop song a half year or so before "Rapper's Delight" . . . 


It was not an accident that these old timers created strength records which are on the books today, not an accident that most of the men enumerated were at some time classed as the strongest man in the world. Not just a mere chance that the best build old timers were dumbbell men, for heavy dumbbell training has the unusual ability to build great strength, muscle and an admiration-creating (admirable?) physique. 

Sandow in particular was the inspiration of millions, he made millions of dollars through the excellence of his physique and without heavy dumbbell training it is doubtful if he would have been heard of outside of a few European countries where he was known as a wrestler when he was a young man, instead of being a household word, a word that is synonymous with strength and development, in every part of the world today, 22 years after his death. 

 
William Buckingham Curtis, center. 


The Mister America's enumerated in the second group of strength athletes, the champion lifters, would not have attained such great fame for their splendid physiques and lifting records were it not for heavy dumbbell training, for the dumbbell has been used more by these men than even its more famous partner, the barbell. 

All one needs to do is visit any of the leading gymnasiums of the nation, particularly the York Barbell Club gym or the warmup room before any of the "best build man" contests, to see that dumbbell training predominates, takes up the majority of the training time of the men who are striving for additional renown for their fine physiques. 



Unfortunately there was a lengthy gap between the great old timers and the more recent greats in the world of strength and muscle. While the old timers developed their great strength, their splendid physiques, their muscular development chiefly with heavy dumbbell training, some of them, notably Sandow, later went into the business of selling muscles by mail. 

Note: His "spring grip" dumbbells were even marketed with a bell, as in bells and whistles, that would ring when gripped tightly. Hell, you could just as easily grip a piece of wooden dowel and get the same results, but that's beside the money point here I guess. Come to think of it, the Weiders had a reason for choosing Sandow the Sandwina for their little Olympia trophy. He was deep into marketing, money, and rampant self-promotion. just like Ben and Joey! 



Finding it expensive and difficult to sell heavy weights, they sold the gullible public upon light spring dumbbells and the spreading of syphilis in sexual partners, just as one of the train by mail professors today has made much money promising great things in a physical way with a system of dynamic exercises which he (Charles Atlas) is supposed to have learned by watching his dog and cat, and the animals at the Bronx zoo performing. 

Thanks to Jan D. for the Atlas material . . . it's coming!  


People seek the easiest way, so when they were told that the real secret of Sandow's strength was these three and five pound spring dumbbells, they fell for his system in a big way [a couple guys I have corresponded with still did!]. 

"Making the American Man: How Eugene Sandow, Charles Atlas, and Bob Hoffman Defined the Interwar Man in America" 
57 page thesis from May 2023 by Dayne Lesperance:


More on the Atlas business here:
"The Most Enduring Fitness Scam in History":

There was also a court case between Hoffman and Siciliano, over whether or not Mr. Dynamic Tension used weights and not just dog and cat coaches. 

Little in the way of favorable results was obtained, so the muscle building pastime plunged to a very low state in the early years of this century. The most accepted method of body building by weights in the early years of this century included a single dumbbell and a pair of kettlebells . . . 


. . . with which some of the best heavy dumbbell exercises could be performed. But it was not until the advent of the York system of training in the late 1920s that dumbbell training again came into its own, its former state of result producing glory. Heavy dumbbell training was made a part of the York courses and has played a very important part in developing the outstanding strength athletes of today.  

Note: Here are the exercises/lifts in York Course Number Five
from the York Advanced Methods of Weight Training

1) Thumbs up curl (hammer curl), two dumbbells
2) Two dumbbell press
3) Two dumbbell swing
4) Bent arm pullover, two dumbbells
5) Side bend with one dumbbell
6) Deep knee bend and press, one dumbbell
7) Bentover row, one dumbbell
8) Dumbbell supine press
9) Raise on toes, one dumbbell
10) Continuous pull up and press
11) Situp on bench with dumbbell
12) Deep knee bend, dumbbell overhead. 

Here's York Course Number 8, "ONE Heavy Dumbbell Course":

1) Toe touching, one dumbbell overhead
2) Bentover backhand curl
3) Bentover regular curl
4) One arm pull up and press
5) One arm swing
6) Upright row
7) One hand military press
8) One hand swing and split
9) One hand snatch without moving feet
10) Side press
11) Bentover row
12) Side to side bend

Here is a York Arm Developing Course with Dumbbells
note the lifting movements at Number Six: 

1) Regular two arm curl
2) Regular press
3) Row
4) DB bench press (they're all dumbbell exercises)

5) Bentover stiff arm side swing. Bent over triceps exercise. Standing with feet a comfortable distance apart, knuckles back, arms bent slightly, straighten arms to the rear. Hold dumbbells in front of body, twist the dumbbells to the right, to the left in a circular motion, raise and lower as a wrist exercise. 

6) LIFTING MOVEMENTS: one arm snatch, one arm swing, one arm clean & jerk, one arm military press, side press, bent press, etc., etc., etc . . .

Oops, got a little off on a tangent there. 
Returning to the original article . . . 


There are two distinct forms of dumbbell training in the various York course, what we term light dumbbell training, consisting largely of forward and lateral raises both standing and lying, and exercises which permit the use of much heavier weights such as the clean and press, the deep knee bend and press, the two hands swing, the upright rowing motion, the bentover rowing motion, the alternate press, press in the supine position on a bench or on an incline, alternate or regular curl and press, and the very excellent [bordering on most excellent] single dumbbell exercises, many of which are a part of the York Swingbell Course. 

Yes, you can adapt and do the swingbell course exercise/lifts with dumbbells. Here: York Swingbell Course exercises, course number 13

1) Rotating swing bell, held overhead. Rotate the upper body in a full circle while holding the bell overhead.  

2) High pull up to overhead. Starting with the bell (or dumbbells in this case) across the front of the thighs, with arm and shoulder strength alone, pull the bell up past the top of head to arms' length overhead. 

3) Forward raise without body movement. 

4) Swing from side to side in arc overhead. Hold the bell with the knuckles front. Turn to the side and bend and twist so that the bell touches or comes near to the floor to the right of the body with the bell perpendicular to front. Hold the arms as straight as possible as you lift or swing the bell up and over in a huge circle until it touches the floor in a position similar to the starting position but on the other side of the body. Back to starting position and repeat, rather confused the first time trying, no worries, learning anything new makes us all look like useless boobs at first. Who cares. Not I. It's fun. So there. "Can I get a form check on my "swing from side to side in arc overhead, guys? There's a meet coming up and I wanna go for the gold, silver and bronze in this one-man competition. Should be doable according to my figures." 

5) Swinging weight as in turning a wheel. Hold the bell in the usual starting position in front of thighs, knuckles front. With little or no movement start the bell in a circle toward the left, up and around to the right describing a circular or wheel like movement. Perform a series to the left, then one to the right. 

6) Stiff arm full body swing. Stand with the feet a comfortable distance apart, knees kept STRAIGHT throughout the movement until the bar approximately touches the floor between and behind the legs. Swing the bell up in a half circle, keeping the arms STRAIGHT throughout. This movement should be performed comparatively slowly to obtain the maximum benefit. [This is an exercise, not to be treated as a lift, done very strictly and under full control. Just think of it as a bodybuilding thing. 

7) Swinging exercise, gun type. Start in the usual position of bell, hands, and feet, but with the body leaning slightly forward. Swing from this position to the side and overhead, turning the body and rotating on the balls of the feet as the weight goes overhead and to the side, then back to the starting position and movement to a similar position on the other side of the body. When this movement is performed with a regular cadence, a big half circle will be traced from a position overhead on the right to a similar position on the left. With practice and the use of heavier weights you will put your entire body into action with some movement of the legs and considerable raising and lowering of the body. 

8) French, a.k.a. triceps press. 

10) Swing from center to side overhead. Similar to Number 6 above. 


It differs in the fact that instead of merely extending the bell overhead, it is lifted or swung up to a position at the right, body twisted so that the bar is perpendicular to the front, then back to the low position at center, and swung with stiff arms and turning the body far up to the left. This form of swinging is somewhat similar to the gun swinging type except that it is done with the arms and shoulders and without the movement of the legs and back which are a part of Number 8. 

Okay . . . Bob Hoffman's "How to Be Strong, Healthy and Happy." 
I got a nice hard copy of it to read in the tub while having a drink during my unpaid vacation here. He took 10 days to write the whole thing . . . and that I imagine is before it was edited by other unfortunate souls. 

456 pages after the trim and edit. 

This would be Bob Hoffman's version of the Kerouac "On the Road" race against time and typewriters, likely fueled by protein from the sea, western Chinese food and plenty of click-clacking out them symbols through the night, while dreams of sugar plums dancing the polka, as well as thoughts of sex and death cavorted in his head. I guess that kind of horrid powdered stuff still has selling power . . . 




When in the right mood, i.e., two drinks into a soak in the tub after a bowl (the stress is killin' me here), it's actually very enjoyable for me . . . I can see and hear Mr. Hoffman going on right there in the bathroom, sitting on the toilet with the lid down as I hear his words and as he attempts and succeeds without doubt in defining just what the term "verbose" means. It's a good time! 

Speakin'-a which, it's about time for more of that . . . 

continued from here at 11, not the time silly, in Part Two: 
Teetotum or Twisting Deadlift. 
























 



 



 




 












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