Ok, so my biggest problem is that, particularly when getting to the heaviest of the 5s and into negatives, the workouts become really long. I want to give myself optimum recovery time so that I can lift as heavy as I'm able. Since I'm aiming to keep overall volume about the same throughout the rep ranges, I end up doing 5 or so sets of each exercise and with 3 minutes between each sets (especially squats!) the workouts are both exhausting and extremely time consuming.
While it won't save me from those long workouts toward the end, my idea will make the first several weeks much more time efficient. Here's what I'm thinking about: Instead of beginning with 15s or even 10s, what if I begin with the first day of 5s? I just do 1 set with a drop set. The weight should be heavy enough to cause damage after coming off SD even with very little volume. I'll repeat that weight a few times, adding a set after the 2nd or third time with that weight and repeat. After 4 or 5 times I move the weight up and continue on with, maybe, just two sets. Stay with that weight and adding a set when it seems time, etc, etc. In this way I can continue with the principle of progressive loading and manage the volume in a way that will save significant amounts of time -- at least for the first 4-6 weeks or so.
My biggest hesitation is that I'm wondering whether introducing a weight that heavy to deconditioned muscles (I'm pretty good at SD -- around 17 days
is going to speed up the RBE, thereby shortening the amount of time that I can use that relatively small range of poundages (from day 1 of 5s to day 6 of 5s).
Hopefully all of that made sense. I'm curious to hear people's thoughts on this.
While it won't save me from those long workouts toward the end, my idea will make the first several weeks much more time efficient. Here's what I'm thinking about: Instead of beginning with 15s or even 10s, what if I begin with the first day of 5s? I just do 1 set with a drop set. The weight should be heavy enough to cause damage after coming off SD even with very little volume. I'll repeat that weight a few times, adding a set after the 2nd or third time with that weight and repeat. After 4 or 5 times I move the weight up and continue on with, maybe, just two sets. Stay with that weight and adding a set when it seems time, etc, etc. In this way I can continue with the principle of progressive loading and manage the volume in a way that will save significant amounts of time -- at least for the first 4-6 weeks or so.
My biggest hesitation is that I'm wondering whether introducing a weight that heavy to deconditioned muscles (I'm pretty good at SD -- around 17 days

Hopefully all of that made sense. I'm curious to hear people's thoughts on this.