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One of the keys to losing fat quickly is your metabolism. You might have heard of metabolism in the sense that it relates to food and digestion – when you eat something, your metabolism (or metabolic rate) rises to help with digestion of the food. This rise in metabolism also brings about an extra calorie burn though. Therefore, the bigger metabolic lift you can get, the more calories you’ll burn and the faster you’ll lose fat.

Fortunately, high intensity exercise is one of, if not the best way to boost your metabolic rate, provided you organize your rep ranges properly. With high intensity exercise, you get faster results through harder work, while spending less time in the gym.
Drop Sets
Drop sets involve performing a super-heavy maximum set, then immediately dropping the weight by 20 to 30 percent, going to failure again, then dropping the weight the same amount again, and performing one final all out, gut buster of a set. A good example would be with lat pulldowns –
- One medium and one semi-heavy warm up set.
- One all out set of 10 reps on 125 lbs.
- Drop to 100 lbs and bust out another five reps.
- Drop to 75 lbs and do another three.
As you can see, you won’t get many extra reps on your drop set, but the key is to go to absolute muscle failure. Drop sets work better on machines, as you can change the weights more quickly too, but if you’d rather stick with free weights, have a partner on hand to help you change them and increase safety.
Ladders
Ladders are ascending or descending sets. There are two ways to perform them – on your own or with a partner.
For partner ladders, you’d pick an exercise such as pushups. You do one rep, then your partner does one. You do two, and so does your partner, you both do three, and so on, until you reach your desired number of reps (usually 10, when starting at one.) You can also do descending ladders by starting high and dropping a rep per set.
To do ladders on your own you need two exercises. Pullups and burpees are killer, but work amazingly well.
Perform one burpee, one pullup, two burpees, two pullups, three each, and so on, following a similar scheme to the above partner example.
Pyramids
Pyramids are simply two ladders joined together – you go up, then come back down. Pyramids work well skipping reps too, so instead of doing one to 10 in ones, try 5-10-15-20-15-10-5, or the Crossfit training favorite – 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 18, 15, 12, 9, 6, 3.
100 Total Reps
Just as it sounds – pick an exercise and aim to get to 100 total reps, no matter how long it takes you. This is awesome with body weight squats, or with dumbbell clean and presses.
50 Total Reps
A slightly simpler version of the above, perfect for those who have just recently began working out. If you can't make it to 100, you can make it to 50. Right? Just commit and do whatever it takes.
A Song
Yep – lift for an entire song. You can rest when you need to, but aim to do as many reps as possible. A two to three minute song is perfect, and it works well as you get motivation from the music, and it’s easy to go back and re-test this to see if you’ve improved.
Try leg presses with this one. Pick a favorite song and go to town. Just don’t try to get through the complete works of Mozart – you wouldn’t be too pretty by the end of it. Upbeat and high energy songs are the best bet.
Cluster Sets
More of a strength-training technique, but still a fantastic way to burst through plateaus and increase fat loss. Pick a multi-joint exercise such as barbell back squats, deadlifts, bench presses or overhead presses and load the bar with 75 to 90 percent of your one rep max. Perform a rep, then rest for 10 to 20 seconds and do another. Complete between three and six reps this way, rest for four minutes then repeat three more times.
This allows you to do more total reps with a heavy weight than you could if you performed them back to back.
Fat-burning doesn’t have to be all about treadmills, ellipticals, and the dreaded “3 sets of 15” you can shred fat, build muscle, get stronger and have fun simply by using alternative rep ranges.
- “Five Set and Rep Variations You’ve Probably Never Tried, By Julia Ladewski, Published on June 18th, 2012, Accessed on November 20th, 2012, Retrieved from http://julialadewski.com/2012/06/five-set-and-rep-variations-youve
- Photo courtesy of drjimiglide on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/drjimiglide/2496216440
- Photo courtesy of theloushe on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/theloushe/4532657534
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