douglis said:
I was saying about "the speed slowing down" only when you use less force than the weight from the first time and you were keep saying that less acceleration also results in slowing down.
Don't make me look back at your posts.
The thing is, we debated this months ago on BB.com, and I and you said that if your accelerating, and then accelerating slower, that your still going faster and faster, yes I agreed with what you were saying.
But then if you keep on and on accelerating slower and slower, there would be a point in which you could not accelerate, thus you would keep going at that speed, if that was a 100mph, and you then went down to 90mph, that means you have decelerated. I was thinking in more of the lines that when you accelerated slower you were decelerating.
The thing is I see the point your trying to make, I have know what your saying all along, BUT YOU CANT SEE WHAT I AM SAYING. Your saying that as I have to decelerate at some point in the ROM, that it will take more time than your decelerating. And that after I have used more force than you, I then have to use less force than you.
And for some strange reason you think as my force goes up and down that in the end we have used the same forces.
However as I have said over and over, and you have not replied AT ALL.
1,
How can 80 force every be as high as 140 force for the first fifth of the ROM, or how can 80 be as high as 100 force for the second fifth of the ROM, and how can 80 force be as high as 100 force for the third fifth of the ROM,
3,
My force is far far far higher than your force for more of the ROM, and thus time.
3,
As you also have a disadvantage in this exercise in this part of the ROM, you too will go from using 80 force to a FAR lower force, and far faster and quicker than me. The speed of the lift, the SLOWER the lift, the earlier, higher and longer deceleration phase.
4,
I WOULD LIKE THIS TO BE YOUR FIRST ONE TO TRY AND ANSWER PLEASE.
If you THINK you forcers even out, balance out in the long run, HOW, do you explain that I have moved the weight 10 more meters than you ? JUST try to explain that. Forces are not linear, just like energy, the more energy you use, the more overall or total force you have to use.
5,
The length, size of the of the lifters limbs. For instance, if the lifter had short arms, and very strong triceps to his chest, AND moved the bar very fast, as he had very high RFD {Rate of Force Development} the deceleration phase would be much shorter, say the last 10%
6,
The lift in concern, as if your doing the squat for instance, you would have a acceleration, then a deceleration phase as say 40 to 50% then another acceleration, then another deceleration.
7,
All this deceleration goes in the faster lifter favour and in the slower lifter disfavour.
8,
What D. and K are trying to say {which is the opposite of Newtons Laws} for every action there is NOT an equal and opposite re-action.
As when I push up against gravity, moving at 1m ever 3 seconds, there is a reaction force that is equal in size, but opposite in direction to my push, and the FASTER I move at this constant speed, the HIGHER the force will be needed, and thus there is a HIGHER reaction force that is EQUAL in size, but opposite in direction to my push.
D. and K. Think the faster I move in accelerations or at constant speeds, that the opposite reaction force does not happen ? But why ?
As whenever an object pushes another object it gets pushed back in the opposite direction with an equally hard force. THUS THAT MEANS THE MORE FORCE/SPEED, THE MORE OPPOSITE REACTION FORCE PUSHES BACK, THUS MORE TENSION ON THE MUSCLES THE MORE FORCE/SPEED. You seem to think that there is no G-force.
8,
Just TRY and tell me how I am using far far far more energy in the faster lifts, if its not more force used ? How do you use more power then without more force ?
9,
Please note that the forces are higher in the faster reps for two fifths higher, that's 50% that means the forces overall in the 6 seconds are higher for 50% of the time.
10,
In the first segment 140 = 75% or 60 more than 80.
11,
In the second segment 100 = 25% or 20 more than 80.
12,
In the third segment 100 = 25% or 20 more than 80.
13,
In the forth segment 40 = 100% or 40 less than 80, BUT still its 80, in this forth segment, 80 is still not as high as 140 or a 100. So this means its still has not reached the higher forces of 140 or 100.
14,
In the fifth segment 20 = 300% or 60 less than 80, BUT still its 80, in this fifth segment, 80 is still not as high as 140 or a 100. So this means its still has not reached the higher forces of 140 or 100.
15,
D. does not seem to understand that he seems to think that when my forces are lower, that his forces somehow catch up, but as I have said over and over and over, 80 is still not as high as 140 or a 100. So this means its still has not reached the higher forces of 140 or 100. So the total or overall forces are still and will always be higher in the faster reps, that first fifth 140, second fifth 100, and third fifth 100, and as I have said these forces in the first three segments are a 100 higher and higher for 50% of the rep.
16,
Why is D. not able to answer the above ? As he's wrong, if not why please ?
douglis said:
The study was about explosive lifting.When you try to lift explosively the 81% of 1RM the deceleration phase(where you use less force than the weight) is for the last 52% of ROM.
Yes, it seems so as I read more, however, this is for powerligting, and have you ever noticed how most bodybuilders train the bench press ? Its in the shorter ROM rep range thus they want to train the chest muscles more, thus they leave out the last quarter or more, where
because of the biomechanical disadvantages of the triceps taking over more of the weight of the lift from the chest muscles, as you pointed out, there is on this lift ONLY a deceleration at roughly where the triceps take over more of the weight. And as I have said, this will depend on the length of the persons arms, the strength ratios of the persons triceps to chest muscles and so on; this means that different people will have different points where they find the weight harder to move faster in certain parts of the ROM.
And as I said The lift in concern, as if your doing the squat for instance, you would have a acceleration, then a deceleration phase as say 40 to 50% then another acceleration, then another deceleration.
Also all this deceleration goes in the faster lifters favour and in the slower lifter disfavour, as of the faster lifter has a great acceleration, thus MORE force = speed/acceleration being used, as the slower you move at this weak point in the ROM, the faster or more the deceleration will be.
The best way to increase force is to rapidly accelerate, BUT with a heavier weight. Doing so increases the tension over the full range of the exercise and not just during the initial acceleration. AND WITH LIFTING THE FASTER REPS, YOU CAN AND DO USE HEAVER WEIGHTS THAN IN THE SLOWER REPS. As higher weight will result in great force, greater peak force, greater acceleration force. Power is ability of the muscular system to produce the GREATEST POSSIBLE FORCE in the shortest amount of time. Power is simply the product of muscle force multiplied by the velocity of movement: P = F x V. Any increase in power must be a result of improvements in either strength, speed or a combination of the two. Some people can possesses a very large muscle mass and a tremendous amount of strength; however lack an ability to contract those strong muscles very quickly. To overcome this, power training that will result in improving the rate of force development.
Power = Force x Distance/Time
The biomechanical advantages and disadvantages of the Human Muscles are common either you lift fast or slow.
douglis said:
When you lift a weight slowly practically there're no acceleration/deceleration phases. It’s like lifting a weight with constant speed hence for almost the whole ROM you use force equal with the weight.
yOU JOKE RIGHT ?
Where did you get that information from, and how can you prove it with evidence and facts ?
How when the triceps take over a lot in the weight, do you still think you can keep this constant force going ? that's very impossible.
When you lift a weight up, there are many biomechanical advantages and disadvantages thought-out the ROM, and the slower you go the more you will feel them. I you go very slow, the whole lift will be full of mini accelerations and decelerations.
Work you performed is equal to a force times a distance.The Law of Inertia; in the
ABSENCE of an external force, {that means air resistance and gravity} a body in motion will continue to move at constant speed and direction, that is, at constant velocity. For a given body, the acceleration produced is proportional to the strength of the external force, so doubling the external force will cause the body to pick up speed twice as fast. To every action there is always opposed an equal and opposite reaction: or the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other are always equal, and directed to contrary parts. Laws of the Vertical Motion.
Wayne