- Apr 20, 2005
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- 1,821
Originally Posted by Durden7
12+ is muscular endurance. 8-10 is a better hypertrophy range.Originally Posted by brettTHEjett
I'm really disappointed with my weak shoulders and little progress.
Shoulder/trap workout is every friday.
-3 of 6 over head BB press standing (100lbs)
-3 of 6 DB shoulder press sitting (45 lbs)
-2 of 6 Arnold DB press sitting (35lbs)
-2 of 12 lateral raises AND 12 front raises (20lbs)
-3 of 12 reverse flys (machine:115lbs)
-2 of 12 BB shrug (135lbs)
-2 of 6 BB shrug (225lbs)
I know hypertrophy comes with 12+ reps but I'm also told that the more fatigue you come to the more muscles grow, which is why my sets are lower reps and higher weights at the beginning.
I left the gym pissed off because those weights are the highest I can get and my shoulders don't feel the pump. My diet+supplements are on point too.
Is this workout effective, and should I be doing it once a week or more?
Please+thanks
Also, just because you dont feel a pump doesnt mean it was a bad workout.
He's right, go for 8-10 reps for sets 2 and 3 of your first two exercises and maybe a 4th set of 6-8. (meaning you're reaching failure at 6-8, not just stopping there.) I'd also streamline your exercises a little bit more. No need to do 3 different overhead pressing exercises in one shoulder workout. If you're really trying to add size to your shoulders, I'd stick with a seated overhead barbell press and switch it with overhead dumbbell presses every 3rd shoulder workout. I'd do the standing presses for warmups or once in a while to incorporate core strength, but it somewhat limits how much weight you can press. Just do one pressing movement per shoulder workout for 4-5 sets (not counting the warmup) and you'll probably start seeing better results. Also, just add reverse flyes or bent-over lateral raises and then standing laterals before shrugs. Front delt raises are just overkill except for once in a while. You use your front delts everytime you train chest, do pushups, etc...
You could also look into adding upright rows after you've done your overhead presses, and if you find the right info/instruction, doing some explosive lifts like power cleans and hang cleans. Just be consistent with your shoulders and keep it simple while adding some variety from time to time and they'll grow.