Unlike muscle groups that require many exercises to work them from several angles, the biceps are somewhat limited in their mobility.
Of course the curl is the best exercise, but that doesn't mean you can't be creative.
Designing a mix of moves that strengthen your biceps as well as your brachiallis and forearm muscles can keep your work-outs interesting and your arms growing.
After doing the barbell curl, pick one exercise from section A and one from Section B. Then build your program according to our chart below.
Whatever combination you pick, this six-shooter plan will give you the guns you've been looking for.
Keeping your back straight, slowly curl the bar up until your foreams are just short of perpendicular to the floor. Then lower the weight.
GET MORE: instead of using a bar or dumbbells, move the preacher station in front of a low-cable pulley and try doing cable curls using the bench.
The resistance will come from the angle rather than from the downward force of gravity, so you'll work the muscle fibres differently.
GET MORE: before you curl, try rotating your hand inwards until the knuckle of your thumb points towards the opposite leg.
Curling the weight up this way lets you incorporate the brachialis muscle, underneath your biceps, to add extra size to your arms.
GET MORE: at the start, turn your palms 180 degrees inwards so that they are facing behind you.
As you lift the weights, twist your wrists inwards so your palms end up facing your shoulders at the top of the move.
This alternation forces your wrists, forearms, biceps and brachialis to assist.
GET MORE: instead of holding the weights in the centre of each handle, try holding them further forward, with the tops of the dumbbells flat against your thumb and forefinger.
This gives your forearms a break so they don't give out before your biceps.
GET MORE: once you become proficent, try this using a pair of dumbbells.
You'll find it takes more effort to maintain proper form.
GET MORE: turn your hands over so that your palms face up.
This position works the bottom of your forearms (the wrist flexors), whereas raising the weights with your palms down develops the top portion (the wrist extensors).
By Myatt Murphy
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I usually do 1.25kg, 3kg, 5kg, 6kg, 7.5kg, 8kg, 10kg... then go backwards. Try it.