Noob Question.....Can HIIT be done with weights?

I have read the sticky in regards to HIIT and I want to know if I can do this with weights?

Like benching as fast as you can and then slowing it down and repeat....

Thanks in advance.
 
You ask about HIIT (High INTENSITY Interval Training), but then described Interval Training. The underlying goal of HIIT is to drive your heart rate to near maximum as quickly as possible and then allow your body to recover just enough that you can exert maximum effort again, thereby keeping yourself near maximum effort for an extended period of time. Typically HIIT is practiced by sprinting for 10-30 seconds, walking for 10-60 seconds and repeating 4 to 8 times.

Now, weight training tends to be somewhat HIIT llike in practice, especially when performing compound movements to near failure. When performing squats or deadlifts with a weight that you can just complete 5 reps with will definately increase your heart rate to near maxiumum in less than 30 seconds. Bench presses usually don't because they don't involve enough muscle mass, but some other upper body exercises like weighted pull ups come close. I think the flaw in using these as HIIT is that it is not possible to perform a second set at near maxiumum effort with out resting for an extended period of time (3-5 minutes). You could reduce the weight by 25% on each set and come close to teh effect of HIIT perhaps.

I also think that the best possible exercise for HIIT is sprinting (or runing stairs or hill sprints), because the human body is designed for upright running (from evolution to get away from danger or to get to food). All the other stuff we have invented (bikes, ellipticals, treadmills, rowers, etc.) just don't work the body in it most efficient manner and the manner it eveolved over millions of years to do.
 
You ask about HIIT (High INTENSITY Interval Training), but then described Interval Training. The underlying goal of HIIT is to drive your heart rate to near maximum as quickly as possible and then allow your body to recover just enough that you can exert maximum effort again, thereby keeping yourself near maximum effort for an extended period of time. Typically HIIT is practiced by sprinting for 10-30 seconds, walking for 10-60 seconds and repeating 4 to 8 times.

Now, weight training tends to be somewhat HIIT llike in practice, especially when performing compound movements to near failure. When performing squats or deadlifts with a weight that you can just complete 5 reps with will definately increase your heart rate to near maxiumum in less than 30 seconds. Bench presses usually don't because they don't involve enough muscle mass, but some other upper body exercises like weighted pull ups come close. I think the flaw in using these as HIIT is that it is not possible to perform a second set at near maxiumum effort with out resting for an extended period of time (3-5 minutes). You could reduce the weight by 25% on each set and come close to teh effect of HIIT perhaps.

I also think that the best possible exercise for HIIT is sprinting (or runing stairs or hill sprints), because the human body is designed for upright running (from evolution to get away from danger or to get to food). All the other stuff we have invented (bikes, ellipticals, treadmills, rowers, etc.) just don't work the body in it most efficient manner and the manner it eveolved over millions of years to do.

I agree with everything but the line I bolded. Actually, because we are not adapted for bikes,ellipticals, etc. - although you could argue that we did adapt for treadmills - we tend to be inefficient (although bikes are very efficient) and burn more calories, which is all the reason to use these for exercise.
 
I figure you can do HIITs with weights but why? Weight training will drive the blood pressure up more then heart rate. It's cardio training that drives the heart rate up more. Personally I would NOT do HITTs with weight but one can go at a FAST pace weight training (taking 30-60 sec breakes btw sets). Fast pace training at moderate / heavy weights are tough and I cannot keep it up for more than 20 minutes.
 
do you want to do HIIT with weights to improve your cardiovascular fitness? If so, then you should focus on exercises that work many muscle groups. Squats, deadlifts, cleans, snatches, etc. I've done it myself and it's very hard. The problem with it is that often a muscle group and not your cardiovascular system can become a limiting factor, which you don't want if you're out to train your CV system.
 
Introducing weights into HIIT while being pretty new to it can be pretty difficult and can also throw out your running action therefor making you work harder on the shoulders/arms then is really required. Do weights to gain muscle, use HIIT to lose weight.
 
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