xfitxm wrote:Really interesting program. I did fighter pullup and had great results but now it's too challenging to continue it.
For the marine one, I didn't get when I should do the ladder or pyramid or straight sets. Is it 3 times a day and each time is a different rep-scheme or it doesn't matter ?
Also how often do you retest your max for progression? Every 6 week like in OP or more often?
Thanks
On the right you can see the volume recommendations for what you should be working on. So if you can do 10 pull-ups currently, they recommend 3-5 days per week which total 150-240 pull-ups. So 3x a week would be 50-80 pull-ups in one training day, or 5x a week would be 30-48 pull-ups in one training day. You then break it up throughout the day any way you like. So if you did a pyramid (1-2-3-2-1), that's 9 reps right there. If you did that six times in one day (on a day off - upon waking up, mid-morning, after lunch, mid-afternoon, after dinner), you can hit 54 pull-ups in one day without too much difficulty. You could do two sessions at once to do it three times a day, or three sessions at once so you only have to do it twice a day (e.g. pyramid, rest 3 minutes, pyramid, rest 3 minutes, pyramid).
Just mix it up some days, and you don't always need to do the same volume. For example, if you did 54 pull-ups like before, the next day you could straight sets (e.g. 5x3 morning, noon, and night for a total of 45 reps). The main idea is do as many perfect reps as you can while fresh (very similar to GTG and Fighter Pull-Ups), and if form falters you use an easier assistance movement to finish your reps for the day.