Intro to Mechanical Drop Sets


In a few weeks, a top secret project will likely be unveiled.

It all kicked off when the bosses, Tim Patterson and TC, called me out of the blue one day asking if I could come up with the ultimate growth program for you guys: a 12-week plan including the day-to-day workouts and diet and supplement programs to turn any beanpole into a man of steel.

I was quickly seduced by the project mostly because I like to help people achieve their dreams, but also because when these two guys get on the phone with ya', you don't say no. (I wouldn't want them to halt my monthly shipment of Biotest goodies!)

The program is almost complete; there are only a few details to iron out. But to prepare you mentally for it, I decided to give you a small taste of the pain and results to come.

Mechanical Drop Sets


The Workings of the Machine

The cornerstone of the 12-week plan is a training system called mechanical drop sets. This technique allows you to thoroughly blast your muscles into oblivion, creating enough damage to the muscle fibers forcing your body to grow or die. This is an approach that allows you to truly go to the limit of what your muscles can give you — maximum growth via maximum stimulation.

Mechanical drop sets are based on the same idea on which drop sets are built.

The goal of a drop set is to allow the trainee to continue performing an exercise even when the point of muscle failure (incapacity to complete one more lift) has been reached. To do so, when you reach failure, you reduce the weight by 25 to 50% and continue to perform reps.

This can be effective, but from experience it isn't optimal. For some reason, I have a hard time believing that performing reps with 50% of what you just lifted will have much of an effect on growth besides an increased pump. Don't get me wrong, it'll work. But I don't see it as optimal.

Mechanical drop sets are similar since you're still focusing on performing more reps once you hit failure. However, this time you don't reduce the weight. Rather, you make a small change to the execution of the movement to allow yourself to get more reps with the same weight.

The change can be a difference in grip, foot stance, angle of movement, etc. It's pretty much the same basic exercise, but with a technical variation.

The whole 12-week program will include close to 40 of such exercise complexes. But in the meantime, here's a cool arm program that'll introduce you to the fine torture that is mechanical drop setting.


The Mechanical Arms Program

Mechanical Drop Alternating Complex A

A1) Steep-angle preacher curl

6-8 reps
10 seconds rest

Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Perform with your elbows on the steep side of the preacher bench using either dumbbells or a straight bar.

A2) 45-degree preacher curl

Same weight for as many reps as you can
10 seconds rest

Execution: Perform the curl on the angled side of the preacher bench using either dumbbells or a straight bar.

A3) Standing barbell curl

Same weight for as many reps as you can
90 seconds rest before moving on to A4 through A6

A4) Close-grip bench press

6-8 reps
10 seconds rest

Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Perform with your thumbs together (hands roughly 8 inches apart).

A5) Medium-grip bench press

Same weight for as many reps as you can
10 seconds rest

Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Perform with your thumbs 10 to 12 inches apart.

A6) Standard-grip bench press

Same weight for as many reps as you can

Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Perform with your hands 20 to 22 inches apart.

90 seconds rest before going back to A1 through A3

Perform this complex 4 times.


Mechanical Drop Alternating Complex B

B1) Steep-angle reverse-grip preacher curl

6-8 reps
10 seconds rest

B2) 45-degree reverse-grip preacher curl

Same weight for as many reps as you can
10 seconds rest

B3) Standing reverse-grip curl

Same weight for as many reps as you can
90 seconds rest before moving on to B4 through B6

B4) Lying bar triceps extension

6-8 reps
10 seconds rest

B5) Lying bar triceps extension plus close-grip bench press

Same weight for as many reps as you can
10 seconds rest

Mechanical Drop Sets
Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Perform the eccentric portion as a typical lying triceps extension. Then bring the bar to your chest and perform the concentric portion as a close-grip bench press with your elbows tucked in.

B6) Close-grip bench press

Same weight for as many reps as you can

Execution: Keep your elbows tucked in for both the lowering and lifting phases.

90 seconds rest before going back to B1 through B3

Perform the complex 4 times.


Accentuated Eccentric Complex C

C1) 2/1 preacher curl

3-5 reps lowered in 6-8 seconds
45 seconds rest

Mechanical Drop Sets
Mechanical Drop Sets
Mechanical Drop Sets

Execution: Lower the bar with one arm but use both arms to bring it back up.

C2) 2/1 lying dumbbell triceps extension

3-5 reps lowered in 6-8 seconds
60 seconds rest

Execution: Lower the dumbbell with one arm but use both arms to help bring it back up.

Perform the complex 3 times


Conclusion and Recommendations

This is just a taste of what's to come! But for those of you who decide to punish your arms for a few weeks, here are a few quick recommendations to make the most out of this program:

Mechanical Drop Sets
Mechanical Drop Sets

Good luck, but you'll need even more once the whole 12-week mass blast is ready.

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