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Tempo

Tempo controls the speed of each phase of a rep, recorded in a 4-digit format. It's optional — leave it blank for normal/uncontrolled tempo.

Format: E-P-C-P

PositionPhaseExample
EEccentric (lowering)3 = 3 seconds lowering
PPause at bottom/stretched position1 = 1 second hold
CConcentric (lifting)2 = 2 seconds lifting, X = explosive
PPause at top/contracted position0 = no pause

Common tempos

TempoWhat it meansUse case
3-1-2-03s down, 1s pause, 2s up, no pauseGeneral hypertrophy with control
4-0-1-04s eccentric, explosive concentricEccentric emphasis
5-5-1-05s down, 5s pause, 1s upPaused squats/bench for sticking point work
2-0-2-22s down, 2s up, 2s squeeze at topPeak contraction emphasis
X-0-X-0Explosive both phasesPower/speed work
5-0-0-05s eccentric onlyNegative reps

Why track tempo?

Consistency

Using the same tempo between sessions makes progression comparisons meaningful. If you benched 200 lbs × 8 with a 3-second eccentric last week, doing it with a 1-second eccentric this week isn't the same difficulty.

Time Under Tension

HyperIron automatically calculates TUT when tempo is tracked:

8 reps × (3 + 1 + 2 + 0) = 48 seconds TUT

Specific training effects

  • Slow eccentrics (3–5s) increase muscle damage and hypertrophy stimulus
  • Paused reps build strength at specific positions (bottom of squat, chest on bench)
  • Explosive concentric develops power and rate of force development

When to use tempo

Tempo is most useful when you have a specific training goal that requires controlled rep speed:

  • Hypertrophy blocks: 3-1-2-0 or similar for controlled, time-under-tension focused sets
  • Sticking point work: 3-2-1-0 with a pause at the weak point
  • Eccentric training: 4-0-1-0 or 5-0-1-0 for slow negatives
  • Speed work: X-0-X-0 for dynamic effort sets

If you're just training normally without a specific tempo prescription, leave the field blank.

Tempo and analytics

  • TUT is tracked as a separate metric, not factored into tonnage or 1RM
  • Tempo does not adjust 1RM estimates — a slow tempo makes the set harder but doesn't change your max strength
  • Progress comparisons are most meaningful when tempo is consistent across sessions