If you spend 30 seconds in your entire set of say overhead presses, you're exposing your muscles, joints, ligaments and brains to 30 seconds of load. If you increase that to 40 seconds, you're exposing those variables to an additional 10 seconds, per set. In 3 sets, you've an additional 30 seconds of load if compared to using 30 seconds per set.
Essentially, you're giving yourself an extra set, without going through that extra set.
This is very beneficial in hypertrophy, because as we know, increased duration of load, increase the amount of hypertrophy potential.
If you don't have an additional load to use, or cannot use an additional load because it's too heavy, increasing T.U.T. is a beneficial variable to use, as it continues to stretch the fascia and enable more hypertrophy.
It can be 40 seconds, 50 seconds, 60 seconds whatever. As long as the T.U.T was longer than the previous session, you'll probably reap a good amount of hypertrophy benefits out of an increment in T.U.T.
It is just ONE of the many variables that can be played around with to grow muscle.
Another method is to increase repetitions in a set, but that's another story. Generally, in BODYBUILDING, , it's a good idea to stay within 8-12 repetitions. Anything more, you're not using sufficient load. Anything less you're using too much load.
HOWEVER, this IS not SET IN STONE. There are plenty of professional bodybuilders out there, who go for sets of 20 even. This however, isn't easily achievable for the common gym-rat because you've not had enough sarcoplasmic hypertrophy to enable tolerance to such workload in a set.
I may have deviated, but that should get the idea in.
Milk and squat to gain weight?, Is it gonna work? Dumbbells or barbells?
Nov 3 2010, 10:28 AM
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