This is one of my favorite splits if not the #1. I like it because it's very flexible and IMO you can train more frequently without over-training.
Basically it would go something like this:
Upper-body workout "A"
-Rows
-Bench
-Decline skull-crushers
-Hammer curls
-One-arm lateral raise
Lower-body workout "A"
-Squats
-Leg curls
-calves
Upper-body workout "B"
-Pull-ups/pull-downs
-Weighted dips
-Tricep pressdowns
-Preacher curls
-one-arm raise to the front
-rear delt raise/reverse pec-deck
Lower-body workout "B"
-Leg-Press
-Romanian Deadlift
-calves
Hardgainer/max recovery volume:
Upper-body "A"
off
off
Lower-body "A"
off
off
Upper-body "B"
off
off
Lower-Body "B"
off
off
repeat (1 on 2 off)
For a higher volume split, you could do 1 on 1 off. So:
Upper "A"
off
Lower "A"
off
Upper "B"
off
Lower "B"
off
If you have recovery abilities which far exceed the average person and/or you're on tons of gear, GH, slin, etc, you could try the ball-to-the-wall approach:
Upper "A"
Lower "A"
off
Upper "B"
Lower "B"
off
^Most people will over-train pretty quick doing that, I know I would.
As far as sets, reps:
Reps should stay in the 8-12 range for upper-body and 12-20 for lower body 90% of the time. Once in awhile you can do a heavy set or high-reps set to shock the muscle. For example a 3-rep bench or a rest-pause set where you go to 20 on rows.
Sets are detirmined by the exercise. 2 sets for isolation exercises like curls or raises, up to 5 for compound exercise like squats or rows (first set extremely light, gradually work up in weight to the last set)
Basically it would go something like this:
Upper-body workout "A"
-Rows
-Bench
-Decline skull-crushers
-Hammer curls
-One-arm lateral raise
Lower-body workout "A"
-Squats
-Leg curls
-calves
Upper-body workout "B"
-Pull-ups/pull-downs
-Weighted dips
-Tricep pressdowns
-Preacher curls
-one-arm raise to the front
-rear delt raise/reverse pec-deck
Lower-body workout "B"
-Leg-Press
-Romanian Deadlift
-calves
Hardgainer/max recovery volume:
Upper-body "A"
off
off
Lower-body "A"
off
off
Upper-body "B"
off
off
Lower-Body "B"
off
off
repeat (1 on 2 off)
For a higher volume split, you could do 1 on 1 off. So:
Upper "A"
off
Lower "A"
off
Upper "B"
off
Lower "B"
off
If you have recovery abilities which far exceed the average person and/or you're on tons of gear, GH, slin, etc, you could try the ball-to-the-wall approach:
Upper "A"
Lower "A"
off
Upper "B"
Lower "B"
off
^Most people will over-train pretty quick doing that, I know I would.
As far as sets, reps:
Reps should stay in the 8-12 range for upper-body and 12-20 for lower body 90% of the time. Once in awhile you can do a heavy set or high-reps set to shock the muscle. For example a 3-rep bench or a rest-pause set where you go to 20 on rows.
Sets are detirmined by the exercise. 2 sets for isolation exercises like curls or raises, up to 5 for compound exercise like squats or rows (first set extremely light, gradually work up in weight to the last set)

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