Speediance Training Modes & Workout Guide (2026 Edition)

This 2026 Training Modes & Workout Guide shows you how to use Speediance for real strength training — not just connected fitness.
If your goal is progressive overload, better cable mechanics, and measurable hypertrophy, this guide breaks down the modes, metrics, and workouts that actually move the needle.

Mechanical diagram of a seated cable pull featuring gear symbols for progressive overload and a 150KG digital weight readout to explain Speediance's data-driven approach to measurable strength gains.


New to Speediance? The 2026 Buyer’s Guide breaks down resistance, accessories, and whether it fits your training style.

Training Modes (Strength‑Focused Breakdown)

Speediance offers five resistance modes. All of them work for strength, but each one shines in a different part of the rep. Here’s how to use them like a lifter — not a casual app user.

  • Standard: Your baseline “cable stack” feel — perfect for progressive overload.
  • Eccentric: Adds weight on the lowering phase — the easiest way to build strength fast.
  • Chains: Gets heavier as you extend — great for presses, rows, and squats.
  • Constant: No momentum, no cheating — brutal for hypertrophy.
  • Spotter: Automatically reduces weight when reps slow — ideal for grinders.

“Digital weight shines for strength work because it removes momentum. Every inch of the rep is earned — no shortcuts, no bounce, no coasting.”

— Eugene Thong, CSCS

Strength Metrics That Actually Matter

Speediance tracks a ton of data — but only a few metrics actually help you get stronger. These are the ones lifters should care about:

  • Range of Motion: Fixes half‑reps and improves consistency.
  • Time Under Tension: Slow eccentrics + controlled concentrics = hypertrophy gold.
  • Power Output: Useful for explosive rows, presses, and athletic strength.
  • Symmetry: Identifies left/right imbalances before they become injuries.

“Strength isn’t just about adding weight — it’s about adding quality. When your reps look the same, your progress becomes predictable.”

— Charles Damiano, B.S. Clinical Nutrition

Programming for Strength (What Actually Works)

Here’s how to combine Speediance’s modes into a strength‑focused training plan without overcomplicating it.

  • Main Lifts → Standard Mode: Rows, presses, squats, hinges.
  • Overload → Eccentric Mode: Use on final sets or accessories.
  • Lockout Strength → Chains Mode: Great for chest, triceps, and upper back.
  • Hypertrophy → Constant Mode: Perfect for finishers.
  • Near‑Failure → Spotter Mode: Safe grinders without fear of failure.

“Strength training is simple: apply tension, recover, repeat. Speediance just makes the tension part harder to cheat.”

— Eugene Thong, CSCS

Sample Strength Workouts

Two simple, effective strength workouts built specifically for Speediance’s digital weight system.

  • Chest Press — 4×6 (Standard)
  • Lat Pulldown — 4×6 (Standard)
  • Single‑Arm Row — 3×8 (Eccentric)
  • Shoulder Press — 3×6 (Chains)
  • Triceps Pressdown — 3×10 (Constant)
  • Belt Squat — 4×6 (Standard)
  • Romanian Deadlift — 4×6 (Standard)
  • Split Squat — 3×8 (Eccentric)
  • Hamstring Curl — 3×10 (Constant)
  • Calf Raise — 3×12 (Chains)

“Strength comes from consistency. When your equipment removes friction, your training becomes automatic — and that’s when progress compounds.”

— Charles Damiano, B.S. Clinical Nutrition

Related Speediance Guides

The Iron Lexicon: Training Modes Edition

Eccentric Overload
Heavier resistance during the lowering phase to build strength and tendon resilience.
Accommodating Resistance
A resistance curve that increases as you extend, matching your natural strength curve.
Constant Mode
A setting where resistance remains identical throughout the entire range of motion, removing momentum.
Spotter Mode
Automatic weight reduction when reps slow or form breaks down.
Power Output
A measure of force × velocity — useful for explosive strength work.

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