Mueller Center

    4:26 pm in Troy    Tuesday, Nov 24

Getting Started

  • Contact Joe Campo or John Nehrich at (518) 276-2874 or email nehrij @ rpi.edu to evaluate your assessment forms and set up a program just for you.

  • Don't be afraid of looking awkward or out of place in a room of buff bodies.

  • Beginners generally should start with the machines. As you get into it, begin also using the free weights. The machines only allow a restricted movement which helps to insure you do the exercise right. However, with the free weights, you also develop the small muscles that keep a dumbbell from tipping or rotating, for instance.

  • Good form, not the amount of weight lifted, is the key to success. The whole idea of weight lifting is to isolate each individual set of muscles and work them. Bad form can mean you are using other muscles to compensate, so you don't get the benefit of the exercise on the targeted muscles. And bad form can also mean you will strain something that will hurt so bad you will be out of commission for weeks (even permanently).

  • The first time you work out, or even if when you use a new machine, keep the weight ridiculously low for the first few times. (Even so, expect to be really sore the next day.)

  • It has been said that "pain is weakness leaving the body," along with the cliché "no pain, no gain" but there is big difference between "good pain" and "bad pain". Rest for a couple of days until the pain goes away and if it doesn't, see your doctor. Don't play macho and risk seriously hurting yourself.

  • Rest 24 hours between working on a specific body part and doing it again. When you work a muscle, you do a little damage to it. It takes time for your body to repair it, while also making it slightly stronger. In other words, resting is when your muscles actually grow. (And resting means not only resting those muscles, but getting enough sleep. You students know who we are talking to.)

  • Slow movements, not jerky. Generally it should take two seconds or so to raise or lower a weight. If in doubt, go slower.

  • Don't clang weights between each rep. Not only is this annoying to others, but it takes the tension off the muscles for a brief movement.

  • By the same token, don't "lock out" a joint at the full extent of the movement, as this also takes tension off the muscle for that period. It also can damage a joint.

  • Exhale as you strain to lift a weight. Breathe in as you lower the weight.

  • Warm up on the cardio for at least five minutes unless you just came in from walking up the Approach from downtown. Then do your stretches. (You don't want to stretch cold muscles. In fact, the best time to stretch is AFTER your workout.)

  • In general, you would want to do up to three sets on each machine or each exercise, 8 to 12 reps each time. If you find you can consistently do over 12, increase the weight. If you can't do 8 reps, bite the bullet and decrease the weight. However, if you want to get more definition, you might want to increase the number of reps you do each up to 20 (such as for your abs), while to build bulk, you might want to go for slightly heavier weights that you can only do 6 or so reps.

  • For the fullest workout, you want to hit a muscle from all angles. Thus for instance, you might want to use regular dumbbell curls, hammer curls, and reverse curls to work your biceps, all of which vary in the way you hold the dumbbells. Or on leg exercises, point your toes in on one set, straight ahead on the next, and outward on the third. There is some overlap between the Cybex and Paramount machines, where it might seem one is the same as the other, but the best strategy is to use both. You might use the Cybex machines, for instance, on one day and the Paramount machines the next day you work that set of muscles, or maybe use one for a few weeks, then change.

  • In general, work on the larger muscles first. For instance, if on one day you are working on your triceps and chest, concentrate on the chest first, then the triceps.

  • There is no such thing as "spot reducing". You lose body fat from all over your body proportionately, no matter where you burn the calories.

  • You can't "melt" fat by wearing extra clothes. Some people have the idea our body is like a candle. They think if we sweat, the fat, like wax, will soften and leave the body. (If it was true, the fat would melt from the deposits and get into your blood stream, where it would solidify and clog your veins and arteries. Not good. But it isn't true.)
        Your body fat is almost exactly like bacon. You know that in order to melt off the fat, the bacon has be hot enough to sizzle. Yet if you were able to raise your body temperature above about 106 degrees Fahrenheit, you DIE! This can happen and is called heat stroke.
        People who bundle up and sweat a lot might think they are melting off the fat if they weigh themselves before and after. Actually any weight loss is temporary, due to lost of water. Dehydration, too, is dangerous.

  • Muscle doesn't turn to fat (or vice-versa). If you build up muscles and then stop, the muscle tissue does not turn to fat cells. What might happen to suggest this is that you continue to eat the same number of calories you needed when you were exercising, but since you no longer need that many, they (the calories) turn to fat while the muscles slowly wither away.

  • Drink water. Lots of water. Soda, coffee, etc. doesn't count.

  • Every few weeks or couple of months, change around your routine.

  • Here is what NESTA (National Exercise & Sports Trainers Association) recommends:

    • They identify five levels with about four to 8 weeks for each level before advancing. They say you should concentrate all the six types of fitness (balance, flexibility, body composition, muscular endurance, muscular strength, and aerobic capacity within each of these five fitness levels.

    • Neuromuscular facilitation is what NESTA considers the first level, where someone learns coordination between the brain and the musculoskeletal system. This is the time to learn proper form (form, form, form) and this phase is marked with high reps and low number of sets, along with short rest periods.

    • Muscular endurance is the next phase, with greater loads for longer times with minimal recovery between sets. High reps continue in this phase, with additional sets added and a short rest period for every body part worked. Assuming proper form has been learned, there can be more emphasis on muscular conditioning.

    • Hypertrophy (building muscle, starting to bulk up) is the goal during this phase. The number of reps is moderate with more rest and sets. It is important that as the muscle is lengthened during the rep, the time it takes for this is longer than on the other phase, as the muscle contracts. In other words, as you lower the weight, go slower than when you raised it. (Going fast or trying for explosive reps will achieve little in mass or size.)

    • The phase is mostly about strength. The number of reps is low and there is a longer rest taken between sets. Lack of enough rest between sets and between exercises will not give great results.

    • Power is the final goal of the last phase, with emphasis on sport-speed and explosive power. This is also known as "plyometric" training, the goal is to exert the max force in as little time as possible. The sets are very short with maximum effort on each rep, and lots of rest between sets.

    • NESTA says there should be at least 48 to 96 hours (two to four days) rest between working out one set of muscles and doing those muscles again, since it during rest that the muscles get stronger. If you either train the same muscle group in less than two days or more than four will lead to overtraining. They said don't work out each part once a week as this is too long a period. If you feel ready to work out any group of muscles in less than two days, then you must not have worked them out hard enough. If you need more than 96 hours, you probably are working them too intensively and you won't progress, either. (In other words, you want to work out your entire body two or three times a week, not four times, not once - or less.)

  • Keep track of your progress via the card that is available on top of the file cabinet next to the personal items cubby or print out this form:

  • Many exercises work more than one set of muscles. But here are the major groups:

Additional Information

  • Policies for using the Mueller Center.
  • Pre-exercise Assessment Forms
    [1, 2, 3]