So—back to the question at the beginning of this article; which is better for building muscle—heavy weights, moderate weights, or light weights?
If you have fully grasped the above paragraph describing Henneman’s size principle, you will already know the answer. They are all right.
The goal of bodybuilding training is to recruit, and exhaust, the larger, white fibers. The heavy lifter is successful because he or she uses superior forces to recruit, and exhaust, the larger fibers. (See CASE A, above.)
The lighter lifter using more reps/time-under-tension is also successful, because those extra reps will gradually fatigue smaller and medium-sized fibers and force the larger fibers to be recruited and trained. (See CASE B.)
Hypertrophy can happen in a variety of ways. You can target your larger, white fibers with very heavy loads, training them that way. But you can also use lighter loads over more time—this will begin by working smaller muscle fibers, but as they become fatigued and "switch off", progressively larger fibers are recruited, until you finally reach the large, white ones that have the growth potential. Or you can use a balance of forces and volume somewhere in the middle. These are all just different equations of time-under-tension (one end of the spectrum involves more tension, the other more time) but the product is exactly the same: muscle growth.
It might seem counterintuitive to state that smaller loads can build muscles just as well as very heavy loads, however, it’s true: light loads can become as effective in training as heavy loads—provided we exhaust the smaller fibers first. This is the caveat of using lighter loads; to ensure that you are recruiting larger fibers, the smaller and medium fibers must be exhausted first. A few reps with light weights won’t do this, as the smaller fibers aren’t "used up". You have to train to failure.
We all have some experience of this aspect of the size principle in everyday life. Have you ever been forced to hold onto something fairly light—like shopping bags—for an extended period of time? You will have noticed that, as the time mounts up, the light loads begin to feel "heavy". We even say things like "this is getting heavy!" Of course, the load hasn’t changed in weight. What has happened is that our smaller fibers have become exhausted, and can no longer support the load; the larger fibers are recruited, and as a result the light load has the same recruitment effect as a heavy one.
This isn’t just theory—it’s been tested and verified on numerous occasions. One definitive study was completed by the Exercise Metabolism Research Group of McMaster University in 2012.
1 In the study, the researchers had young, healthy males train with both heavy weights (80% of max) and light weights (a mere 30% of max) in different sessions. The resulting protein synthesis (i.e., growth) in the trained muscles was then measured via sophisticated biopsy/histology plus magnetic resonance imaging techniques. The researchers discovered that the
same amount of growth occurred with both amounts of weight—
provided the subjects trained to failure. The larger, white fibers were equally recruited with heavy
and light weights. (Interestingly, although the loads used didn’t affect the growth response, the number of sets did—three sets produced about
twice the growth of a single set. Something to bear in mind.)
This explains why different bodybuilders have traditionally exploited such a wide variety of set and rep schemes, certainly compared to other athletes. There are successful bodybuilders who lift very heavy; successful bodybuilders who lift relatively light, but with more volume; and all kinds of athletes who fall somewhere in between. In bodybuilding, there really is "more than one way to skin a cat"—as long as you work hard.
Isometric Bodybuilding and the "Goldilocks Zone" for Muscle
So—if heavy, moderate and light forces all build similar amounts of muscle—which should you be using in your
isometric training?
Firstly, we must establish that there is such a thing as "too heavy" for bodybuilding.
Extremely high loads will recruit the large fibers you want, but since you can’t sustain maximum forces for too long, they won’t exhaust them of their chemical resources, which is the trigger for muscle growth. Heavy—for hypertrophy—does not mean maximum loads, but loads you can hold for at least 3-6 seconds.
There is also "too light". Once you are holding loads light enough to sustain for over 45-60 seconds, your cardiovascular system begins taking more punishment than your muscular system, and this will naturally curtail your performance and results.
So, for isometric bodybuilding, we want to be working with a "Goldilocks Zone"—neither too heavy, nor too light—somewhere between 6 seconds and a minute. This is still a pretty large zone…so which part of it should we be aiming for?
The science is quite explicit here—you should ideally train in
every part of this zone.
Just not during the same training cycle.
From The Ultimate Isometrics Manual, p. 276. MVC = Maximal Voluntary Contraction.
All forms of training—including heavy, light, and moderate—result in diminishing returns (also called accommodation). Over time, your body adapts to the stimulus, and then results begin slowing down. This effect is more pronounced the more powerful your training is—the quicker you adapt, the quicker diminishing returns set in. Since isometrics are the most effective form of resistance training, isometric athletes have to be very aware of accommodation, and must train around it by altering their training program every 6-8 weeks.
There are numerous ways of altering your program—you can change exercises, training angles, volume, frequency, etc. Another fundamental variable you can play with is intensity: the forces you are expressing. For this reason, athletes should be actively changing their relative loads every cycle or two: sometimes use very heavy holds for just 6-10 seconds; sometimes use holds comprising 20-30 seconds; sometimes use lighter loads for longer, up to a minute. Doing this consistently will keep you in the "Goldilocks Zone", while still actively avoiding accommodation throughout your training career.
This approach is also useful because different loads have different benefits, beyond hypertrophy; heavy loads increase strength, lighter loads are easier on the joints and increase endurance, etc. There is no reason why you can’t reap all these benefits in your training, over the medium-term.
Three principles to take from this article: