Heavy Lifting
BhangraPrince
Posts: 123 Member
I know everybody has their own ideas about what is considered heavy lifting... So lets have at it ....
Squat
Bench Press
Overheard Press
Squat
Bench Press
Overheard Press
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Replies
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Heavy lifting is just lifting to exertion and adding weight as needed. If you bench press the bar only and max out after a few reps, that would still be considered "heavy lifting". So "heavy" is relative to the individual.
Anyways - my current stats
Squat - 130
Overhead press - 40
I don't bench press (gasp)0 -
I will feel like I'm heavy lifting when I can
Bench 2x bodyweight
Squat 3x bodyweight
Deadlift 3.5x bodyweight
....which may be never0 -
It's basically at a certain percentage of your 1RM for a lift.
Say somewhere 80-85%+
It's not a lift, or collection of lifts, in itself.0 -
It's relative,
what's heavy for you, might be light for me or vice versa.
In most cases heavy will be 85% of your 1 rep maxes.
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Heavy lifting is what I currently lift. If you lift more it is super heavy lifting, if it is less it is medium lifting, and if it is less than my warmup weights, then it is light lifting.
As they say, it is all relative0 -
It's basically at a certain percentage of your 1RM for a lift.
Say somewhere 80-85%+
It's not a lift, or collection of lifts, in itself.
Yup.
2 x bodyweight etc. is just an indicator of how strong you are for your size.
But when you're lifting 85% of your max, you're lifting heavy no matter how strong you are or aren't.0 -
Based on the amount of yelling my coworker did as I moved the printer yesterday (You're going to kill yourself!) 40 pounds is too heavy lifting, so less than 40 must be regular heavy lifting.0
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5'5, 140lbs, female, 32 yrs
Squat: 215lbs
Bench: 100lbs
OH: 105lbs
What's heavy for some will be light for others though. It's all whatever is "heavy" to the person doing it0 -
BhangraPrince wrote: »I know everybody has their own ideas about what is considered heavy lifting... So lets have at it ....
Squat
Bench Press
Overheard Press
Actually, "heavy" lifting describes a low rep range that is conducive to building optimal strength...generally 1- 5 or 6 reps at a high % of one's 1 RM. "Heavy" lifting is traditional strength training...training to maximize strength gains.
Squat, Bench Press, and Overhead Press are compound movements that could be utilized in any type of programming.
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I look at it as anything greater than 80% of my 1rm. That usually puts me in the 4-5 rep range with nothing left for that set.0
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Squat 105 x 6
Bench Press 75 x8
Overheard Press 60 x5
34 female current weight 155 lbs0 -
"Heavy" is not only relative to different people, but different times as well. When I began lifting I could lift x barely one time; now several years later, x is most of the time part of my warm-up. Even from one week to the next can vary significantly -- I might get 4 reps today on a weight I got 6 on last week, and will get 6 again next week, just because I'm having an off day today.0
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I tend to think it terms of relative strength (% of BW lifted) vs. absolute strength (probably b/c I'm small).
I've been using this as a guideline:
https://www.t-nation.com/training/are-you-strong0 -
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My current "heavy" state
Bench - 135 ( I can 2 dirty reps; failure on the 3rd)
Squat - 225 (2 reps)
OHP - 95lbs 2 reps before having to result to a push press..haha; 2 seems to be my magic number.0 -
To get your 1RM is it a calculation or an actual lift to get your total?0
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BhangraPrince wrote: »To get your 1RM is it a calculation or an actual lift to get your total?
Yes and yes.
Use a calculator to determine what you should be able to lift, then warm up to attempting it.
ETA
http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/how-to-test-your-one-rep-max.html0 -
Lifting is a single beer. Heavy lifting is a beer in each hand. See: bulking.0
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Yes and yes.
Use a calculator to determine what you should be able to lift, then warm up to attempting it.
ETA
http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/how-to-test-your-one-rep-max.html[/quote]
Awesome.. Exactly the kind of info I was looking for..0 -
BhangraPrince wrote: »
Yes and yes.
Use a calculator to determine what you should be able to lift, then warm up to attempting it.
ETA
http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/how-to-test-your-one-rep-max.html
Awesome.. Exactly the kind of info I was looking for.. [/quote]
Thanks0 -
BhangraPrince wrote: »To get your 1RM is it a calculation or an actual lift to get your total?
for me its an actual lift that i train for and attempt0 -
Heavy Lifting. Yet another type of thread that is likely to eventually derail. See also clean eating, Planet Fitness, Exercise and Children, Women's mysterious and spooky stuff that men could not possibly understand, and relationship advice.0
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I am just getting back in to getting fit...so I am not a proponent of heavy lifting as there is too much risk of injury and at my age 43 it is just not worth it.
Now, as said, everyone defines heavy differently. For me, I am looking to lift 3 sets for between 10 and 12 reps. Some ideas of what I am lifting:
BP: 180lbs 3x10
Leg Press (Life Fitness Pro2) with full range: 290lbs 3x10
Deadlift using a Hammer Strength Base Squat: 225lbs 3x100
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