How To Build Bigger
Arms
Guns, jacks, pipes, hooks, pythons… Whatever you call
them, the fact remains that most guys want bigger arms. While
they are nowhere near as impressive as a big set of traps, you
still don’t want to have and extra six inches of space in your
shirt sleeves; that’s for sure. So the question is how to
build bigger arms? The answer is not as simple as you might
assume. If it were easy, you would see tons of guys walking
around with 18 inch arms. But that simply isn’t the
case.
It’s been said over and over again that in order to add an
inch to your upper arms you need to gain ten pounds of
bodyweight. This advice has become gospel and it seems that
nearly everyone agrees with this these days. Real world
evidence shows that this is not the case, however. Walk into
any public gym on a Monday night at five o’clock and you will
see quite a few skinny guys, weighing no more than 170 pounds,
who are sporting decent sized arms.
Many of them probably have not gained more than 10 or 15
pounds total since they started training but they all have put
more than an inch or two on their arms. This is because
localized hypertrophy/ muscle growth will take place if enough
volume is present, without a large increase in bodyweight. Look
at the calves on soccer players or the forearms on mechanics.
But this only happens up to a certain point.
So these young guys read in some magazine about how to build
bigger arms and start by doing ten sets of arms two or three
days a week. The volume is enough to elicit a growth response
and they may even get a good eight weeks out of this and a
quick two inches of arm growth in the absence of any
significant weight gain. Seems to defy the ten pounds per inch
rule, right?
But what happens after that? Where do they go from there?
The gains will halt and there will be absolutely no more arm
growth whatsoever unless they make some drastic changes. And
that is the pitfall of high volume training- where can you go
when you plateau? Add more volume? At what cost? How much
volume can you add? If ten sets isn’t enough should you try
twenty? And then thirty? And eventually a hundred?
There’s nowhere to go with this approach. Like I said, it’s
great for some quick gains on your arms but isn’t a long term
approach. Once you hit a plateau you have no choice but to
start lifting heavier weights and eating more. More weight on
the bar and more food on your plate is the fastest way to
increase the size of any body part. All the fancy supersets,
drop sets, tri sets, pre exhaustion, post exhaustion techniques
in the world won’t help in the least if you are not doing those
two very important things.
Beginners can train the arms three times per week and
intermediate and advanced lifters seem to do better training
them twice per week. Stick with big exercises like close grip
chin ups, barbell curls, hammer curls, towel curls, dumbbell
curls, parallel bar dips, close grip benches, and lockouts. You
shouldn’t need more than 2-4 sets of biceps and triceps twice
per week to achieve optimal growth, providing that you are
always increasing your loads and steadily adding more calories
to your diet. After a couple of heavy sets finish your arm
workout by getting the biggest pump possible with one or two
higher rep sets.
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