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Reps and sets for muscle mass...

Posted on 1/29/26 at 4:26 pm
Posted by TigerGman
Center of the Universe
Member since Sep 2006
13672 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 4:26 pm
What's recommended these days?

On or two sets @ max weight for say 6 reps, or less weight for say 12 reps and 3-4 sets?

Interested in putting on muscle more than how much weight # itself. If there's even a difference.
Posted by pwejr88
Red Stick
Member since Apr 2007
37725 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 4:36 pm to
Hypertrophy is what grows your muscles.
3-4 sets each exercise.
4-5 exercises.
8-20+ reps.
Struggle last rep each time.
0:45-1:30 rest.
Each body part should have at least 16 sets a week.
Posted by ronricks
Member since Mar 2021
11390 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 4:43 pm to
quote:

Each body part should have at least 16 sets a week.


This is insane. For some people yes. Others no. This isn’t one size fits all. I don’t see how the natty folks on here do 16 to 20 sets per body part unless you aren’t training very hard.
Posted by Long Ball Larry
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2021
1558 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 6:03 pm to
Dr Mike said not to go hard
Posted by bayouvette
Raceland
Member since Oct 2005
5761 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 7:18 pm to
As long as you push your self to near failure and eat surplus... Reps and sets to me is not the deciding factor.

To get big you need to eat and lift heavy shite.

I'm natural and did 16 sets for major body parts for many years. Chest and back I scaled down to 12 but shoulders and legs still do 15+
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
15824 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 7:27 pm to
I shoot for 3 sets of 8-10 reps to where I’m struggling to reach 10 on my first two sets and failing before 8 on my last set. I keep a journal to track it that way I know if I need to add weight.
Posted by lsupride87
Member since Dec 2007
109987 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 7:36 pm to
Biggest thing I ever did for gaining strength was realizing 8-10 reps sucks, 3-5 is so much better

Higher reps made me “feel” like I was doing more, but my strength gains are so much better with heavier weight and less reps

I have no idea if this is proven or not but it was a massive difference for me
This post was edited on 1/29/26 at 7:37 pm
Posted by OysterPoBoy
City of St. George
Member since Jul 2013
43729 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 8:08 pm to
Progressive overload and eat.
Posted by Tiger Ryno
#WoF
Member since Feb 2007
107738 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 8:26 pm to
2 words....

Beyond Failure.
Posted by OysterPoBoy
City of St. George
Member since Jul 2013
43729 posts
Posted on 1/29/26 at 8:50 pm to
quote:

Beyond Failure.


Tried that but my wife got tired of cleaning poop stains out of my gym shorts.
Posted by lsugerberbaby
baton rouge
Member since Mar 2008
3050 posts
Posted on 1/30/26 at 8:57 am to
Pyramid sets will wear you out
Posted by bamaguy17
Member since Jul 2022
1264 posts
Posted on 1/30/26 at 9:02 am to
They all will build muscle with progressive overload. I despise high rep sets on compounds. I save it for accessory type exercises. Powerbuilding if you need a name. I also enjoy top sets with backoff sets. Like I said, with proper diet and progressive overload they all work.
Posted by boxcarbarney
Above all things, be a man
Member since Jul 2007
25965 posts
Posted on 1/30/26 at 10:39 am to
Compound movements, 3-5 reps for strength.

Isolation movements for hypertrophy, I normally do 2 sets of 10 then the last set as many reps as possible.
Posted by ronricks
Member since Mar 2021
11390 posts
Posted on 1/30/26 at 10:45 am to
quote:

I have no idea if this is proven or not but it was a massive difference for me


For me being 46 and natty less is definitely better. For me. I cannot do a 'volume' workout anymore without destroying my joints and I will not repair/recover no matter how much protein I consume. I essentially do one warm up set and then one set to failure. Four exercises total per body part. So in total four warm up sets and four working sets so eight total. Sometimes I will do 10 total but that is only for chest and the extra two sets are just pec deck machine which is super easy. When I was juicing (and younger) I loved volume training because I was on so many androgens/anabolics/orals, gh, insulin that I could repair easily and it literally didn't matter. I wouldn't make it one week now with a volume plan I'd be a mess physically.
Posted by Gifman
Member since Jan 2021
18288 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 7:56 am to
Intensity beats volume every time. For me the best method is two sets to muscle failure per body part.
Posted by MWP
Kingwood, TX via Monroe, LA
Member since Jul 2013
11000 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 12:18 pm to
quote:

. When I was juicing (and younger) I loved volume training because I was on so many androgens/anabolics/orals, gh, insulin that I could repair easily and it literally didn't matter. I wouldn't make it one week now with a volume plan I'd be a mess physically.


Probably should be a caveat with this thread between natty or not because you are talking apples and oranges between the 2 in building muscle mass and it all boils down to recovery. With that said, there is a definite line in volume training going into the high rep range versus the low rep range that builds more strength. I have always used in my training whether on gear or not that you are going to build more muscle mass with a higher rep range and adjust weights/sets with what your body can handle either on/off versus my powerlifting days when I dialed down the reps but went as heavy as I could.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39082 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 12:41 pm to
Time under tension

Proximity to failure

Diet
Posted by Gifman
Member since Jan 2021
18288 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 4:13 pm to
quote:

Beyond Failure.


Doesn’t exist. You either experience muscle failure or you don’t.
Posted by pwejr88
Red Stick
Member since Apr 2007
37725 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 4:19 pm to
quote:

This is insane. For some people yes. Others no. This isn’t one size fits all. I don’t see how the natty folks on here do 16 to 20 sets per body part unless you aren’t training very hard.


Everything I posted is from online coaches such as Andy Galpin. I’m 44 and do all of it no problem with lots of aesthetic success
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
80122 posts
Posted on 2/1/26 at 4:38 pm to
I've been doing drop sets for my upper body. Lift to failure, reduce the weight, rinse, repeat. 3 or 4 sets depending on the exercise.

Day 1 is chest press, lat pulldowns, pec fly, lateral raises, seated dip, rotary torso (the last two are three sets of 8-15 and when 3x15 is too easy I add weight).

Day 2 is shoulder press, tricep pulldowns, bar curls, concentration curls, compound row, ab crunches. I've recently moved to fixed number of reps for some of these. You do want to be careful about pushing certain exercises to failure since pulling a back muscle will set you back several weeks.

Day 3 is leg day and I do 3 sets of 8-15 on 7 exercises.

Been at it about 10 months. My shirts are getting tighter. My official weight at my annual checkup is unchanged, thanks to less fat and more muscle. I have visible muscle growth and have significantly increased my one rep max on most exercises.

You'll want to consume extra protein - instead of 50g which is the standard recommendation, 2g for every three pounds of body weight. Also increase your water intake. High protein intake makes your kidneys work harder.
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