Kane's DFHT (Courtesy of 0311 once again)
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11-02-2006, 06:18 AM
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Rank: Heavyweight
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,314
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Oh, we're talking about two different things. I was assuming you were thinking the single factor and so my point was that that would be a good way to do accumulation and intensification. I personally think either way would be good so I disagree that dual factor is necessarily what you SHOULD be running. Running the single factor with straight progression would almost gurantee you new PR's but the dual factor would probably gurantee you more growth.
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If you act sanctimonious I will just list out your logical fallacies until you get pissed off and spew blasphemous remarks.
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11-02-2006, 06:24 AM
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Rank: Light Heavyweight
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: CA
Posts: 4,174
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Quote:
Running the single factor with straight progression would almost gurantee you new PR's but the dual factor would probably gurantee you more growth.
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Well that all depends upon how agressively we're talking. Dual factor sounds like a better fit because he's become pretty experienced with deloading protocols. It all depends on his buildup. He could gun for a 2/5% PR for dual factor same as single factor really. Either way he'll hit new PR's IMO. If it's dual factor, he's looking at a shorter loading period than single factor. I'm just going off of my experience with both. He could hit PR's all day long if he did D.F., then ran through an intensity phase as opposed to single factor's perpetual 5 x 5 loading.
Either way he's fine, but I'd personally like him to run through an intensity phase to hit his goals a little faster.
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11-02-2006, 06:46 AM
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Rank: Heavyweight
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,314
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That makes sense, 0311. Of course I defer to your experience with the DF. My thought were it would be harder to judge the buildup with DF at this point but since he's already run a single factor he would be able to learn from that and get a great improvement due to proper deloading this time. But as you say, either way OK....but hell, if you can get to the same point faster then that's good .
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11-02-2006, 07:18 AM
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Rank: Light Heavyweight
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: CA
Posts: 4,174
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Yeah, once you've done single factor for a spell, you'll have a great handle on programs that I consider the next building block up like Dual Factor. If you've kept up a log of what you did for single factor, then dual factor should be easy to start. All you're basically doing is inputting what you feel are your TRUE 5x5 1x5 RM's in week 3, reverse plan back to week one, and add another 5-10 pounds for week 4. If someone dicked the dog and overestimated week 3, then carrying it over to week 4 should be a no-brainer. Once the deload week is over (week 5), then all bets are off for the intensity phase. I remember adding 20+ pounds for some exercises like bench and deadlifts like it was nothing.
The intensity phase is what's key for some big gains. That'll be the difference maker that seperates single and dual factor. After the intensity phase is a perfect time to load up on DFHT. Reason being because you can input what you need to specifically address any weaknesses you may have from the full 5 x 5 program.
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11-02-2006, 08:18 AM
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Rank: Heavyweight
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,314
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 0311
The intensity phase is what's key for some big gains.
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Right. I gotcha.
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11-02-2006, 05:26 PM
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Rank: Light Heavyweight
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas
Posts: 4,794
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best of luck kane
Sentinel
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11-02-2006, 08:46 PM
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Rank: Middleweight
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 2,238
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 0311
No more than 4 weeks LOADING, 1 deload, then I HIGHLY recommend incorperating the intensity phase (3 x 3, 1 x 3). I grew very nicely during the tail end of the deload all the way through the intensity phase. Hands down the funnest three weeks of the program! Plus, in order to hit your goals, the intensity phase is vital!
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So I should be doing:
4 Weeks loading DFHT
1 Week Deload DFHT
2 Week Intensity DFHT
Would I do the same exercises for the intensity phase as I did in the deload? and should I run a 2 week intensity phase? I forget about running the SF 5x5 since I'm doing an intensity phase right?
Somewhere along the lines I got confused lol...5x5, DFHT, Load, Deload, Intensity...its a bit much to take in and organize. I HAVE been reading through the DFT Thread as well as 0311's DFT Journal to see if I could answer my own questions, but for some reason (probably school) my brain is on overload right now
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Last edited by Kane; 11-02-2006 at 09:04 PM.
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11-03-2006, 04:39 AM
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Rank: Light Heavyweight
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: CA
Posts: 4,174
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Quote:
So I should be doing:
4 Weeks loading DFHT
1 Week Deload DFHT
2 Week Intensity DFHT
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Never heard of an intensity DFHT before LOL..
Nothing is set in stone. That's what you need to realize. The DFHT could see a 3 week loading phase, or even a 4 week load. It up to YOU. If you feel great, then keep going.
I wouldn't start with DFHT though...
-> DF 5x5 volume phase
-> Deload
-> DF 3x3 intensity phase
-> Deload
-> DFHT loading
-> DFHT deload
...ect...
My old DF journal won't reflect the intensity phase because I experimented with running back to back volume phases seperated by a deload.
To be honest, I'd prefer you to START with the DF 5x5, running through both the volume and intensity phases, then fucking around with the DFHT. My reasoning is because the DF 5x5 can and will give you the strength and overall thickness. The DFHT can be used to compliment your 5x5 training by addressing your weak areas in both your strength and body composition. For example, after the DF 5x5, you maybe stuck at 200 lbs benching about halfway up. So for DFHT, you'll incorperate some more floor/board presses to help out with that (upper 2). Same goes for squatting. If you're stuck, then for DFHT, incorperating the goodmornings and pullthroughs will most certainly help. Biceps not up to snuff after all the heavy 5x5 pulls?.. Incorperate some rest/pausing for arms during your DFHT. Hopefully, I illustrated my point in a way that'll convince you.
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11-03-2006, 04:54 AM
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Rank: Light Heavyweight
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: CA
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One more thing Kane. I personally always used Matt Reynold's version (animalmass). It has the MOST amount of volume because everything is 5x5 excluding one of the OLY Squats (1x5). I don't recommend you use that one. Most people who are where you're at had the most success with Madcow's example:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Madcow
4 Weeks Loading 5x5
Monday:
Olympic Squats: 5x5
Benching: 1x5 (pyramid)
JS Rows: 1x5 (pyramid)
Accessory (skullcrushers and abs)
Wednesday:
Olympic Squats: 5x5 (reduced 15-20% from Monday) or Front Squats 5x5
Standing Military Press: 5x5
Deadlifts: 5x5
Pull ups: 5x5
Accessory (incline curls and abs)
Friday:
Olympic Squats: 1x5 (pyramid)
Benching: 5x5
JS Rows: 5x5
Accessory (weighted dips and abs)
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Only difference is more pyramid schemes to cut back on some volume. This represents the volume phase.
For the deload week, whatever was 1x5 becomes 1x3; and 5x5 becomes 3x3 -> Using the same weight as your last volume week. Other than that, you are dropping the Wednesday squats. If you really feel like shit, then you'd just go twice that week to the gym. Monday is day one, Thursday is 'Wednesday's' workout.
The intensity phase is the exact same setup as your deload week. It would look like this:
Quote:
3 Weeks Intensity Phase
Monday:
Olympic Squats: 3x3
Benching: 1x3 (pyramid)
JS Rows: 1x3 (pyramid)
Accessory (skullcrushers and abs)
Wednesday:
Standing Military Press: 3x3
Deadlifts: 3x3
Pull ups: 3x3
Accessory (incline curls and abs)
Friday:
Olympic Squats: 1x3 (pyramid)
Benching: 3x3
JS Rows: 3x3
Accessory (weighted dips and abs)
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11-03-2006, 05:21 AM
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Rank: Heavyweight
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,314
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Wouldn't help with the confusion just to cut out all the extra jargon and call the deload week plus the intensity phase a 4 week PEAK starting with the same weights? Understainding the deloading part but not thinking of it as two different things?
Last edited by EricT; 11-03-2006 at 05:59 AM.
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