But for example, can someone who is an intermediate to advanced lifter who has has all the CNS adaption for lifting optimized gain 30lbs in 6 weeks as easily as a beginner can ?
I will go back to my contention that at least 95% of people who train do not know what hard training actually is. I have seen people at all levels, from beginners to professional athletes achieve a 20 - 40 lb increase in primarily lean mass over a time frame of 6 - 10 weeks. I have seen it happen on all types of programs, the only constant factor is that the trainee comes into the gym and gets after it.
People can argue things "from a physiological stand point" all they want. Of course it does not change the fact that people are getting these kinds of results as we speak. So obviously things work differently in "the real world" as opposed to in a "physiology book world."
More than anything the results depend upon the individuals ability to push themselves and the environment they are in. (meaning that when they want to quit they are not given that option by coaches or training partners)
Under ' theoretically perfect ' conditions - i.e a person ( i.e. average gym rat ) knows how to train at maximum intensity, a person can dedicate as much time as needed per day and or per week to weight training, a person who's nutrition is impeccable in terms of calories and macro-nutrients to optimize mass gains ( excluding drugs ) - what is the ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM gain in lean muscle mass do you think a person can achieve in a week ?
The average gym rat has the best potential for great results simply because that is the group that has never trained hard in their life. They think they have, but do not understand the next level of intensity.
As I have stated above it is possible to see people gain 20 - 40 lbs in the course of 6 - 10 weeks. Where do I get this time-frame and numbers? I will use my most recent example. I have a friend who trains athletes out of the gym I work out at. Over the summer (this is an 8 week period for the group we are discussing) 5 of his guys gained 20 - 40 lbs.
I will continue with the fact that these 5 guys were hardly in the perfect conditions. They ate whatever they ended up eating with the simple instructions of "we do not care what you are eating as long as you are eating more of it." A couple of the guys skipped breakfast every day. So I have to say that this type of weight gain is possible even under conditions that are not perfect. The deciding factor was that they showed up to the workouts and did everything the coach said, no questions asked.
because I don't think anyone would reasonably expect that it is possible to gain 60 lbs. of muscle mass in 3 months....or 90 lbs in 4 and half months.
I would agree with this. The fast gain of lean mass seems to be the body's response to a sharp increase in training intensity. This response will not last indefinitely. The athlete is now on the "next level" of training. A much faster increase in strength gains will last for about a year or so.
After that gains will be slower.
Though I also believe that there are many times in ones training career that sharp increase in size, power, or strength will be the result. Here are some of them -
- The subject at hand. An increase to what "real" training should be.
- The time when the actual technique sets in and the trainee can feel the groove.
- The time when the trainee learns to use the core and can increase the ability to maintain proper posture under an extremely heavy load.
This is probably not an exhaustive list. They are the three times I have experienced sharp increases in size, power, or strength. They are the times that I have seen others experience sharp increases in results as well.
I am also not saying that achieving these great results are easy. If at least 95% of all trainees do not know or understand what hard training is, then there are 5% or less of the training population who are in the proper mindset to do what it takes to get the great results. These 5% or less represent the people who achieve great things when it comes to training.
What does science suggest is the theoretical ' upper limit ' in terms of muscle mass gain per week / month in your view ?
I can safely say that science does not support the idea that gaining 20 - 40 lbs in 6 - 10 weeks is possible.
Yet, real life flies in the face of science all the time. If 5 guys who train in the gym I train at accomplished this goal I have to believe that this is not a freakish occurrence. How many people, in how many gyms, in how many cities, are achieving these goals right now.
There is too much that is not yet understood about the human body to rely completely on science. Science is only one tool in the toolbox.