Tricep Cable Pushdown: Biomechanics & Clinical Form | VisualBody Lab

Tricep Cable Pushdown

Triceps Focus Isolation Movement Elbow Extension Cable Machine
Medical Disclaimer: This exercise applies significant tension through the elbow joint capsule. Individuals with lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) or triceps tendonitis should carefully manage external load and consider alternative grip attachments to reduce radiocarpal and elbow joint stress.

TL;DR

The Tricep Cable Pushdown is a premier isolation movement targeting the Triceps Brachii. By utilizing a cable pulley, it provides constant mechanical tension across the entire elbow extension range of motion, profoundly emphasizing the lateral and medial heads while ensuring joint stability.

Biomechanics Profile

Primary Mover Triceps Brachii (Lateral & Medial Heads)
Secondary Synergists Anconeus, Long Head of Triceps
Joint Actions Elbow Extension
Resistance Profile Constant Tension (Cable Pulley)

Programming Parameters

Optimal Volume 3-4 Sets × 10-15 Reps
Intensity Target 1-2 RIR (Near Failure)
Rest Interval 60-90 Seconds
Execution Tempo 3-1-1-1 (Eccentric-Pause-Concentric-Squeeze)

Execution Protocol

  • Setup & Alignment Stand facing the cable machine with your feet shoulder-width apart for a sturdy base. Grasp the attachment, hinge slightly at the hips (15-20 degrees), and brace your core. Pin your upper arms rigidly against your ribcage to restrict the movement entirely to an elbow hinge.
  • The Ascent (Eccentric Phase) Allow the cable to pull your hands upward in a slow, highly controlled motion (3-4 seconds) while inhaling deeply. Flex the elbows to roughly 90-100 degrees, or until you feel a profound stretch in the triceps muscle belly, without permitting your elbows to drift forward.
  • The Extension (Concentric Phase) Drive the attachment forcefully downward by contracting your triceps while exhaling. Extend the elbows completely to achieve maximum shortening of the triceps fibers. Pause briefly at the bottom lockout to eliminate momentum and maximize mechanical tension.

Clinical Red Flags

  • Anterior Shoulder Translation (Body English): Allowing the shoulders to roll forward and the chest to collapse shifts the biomechanical load away from the triceps and inappropriately onto the anterior deltoid and pectoralis minor.
  • Elbow Drift (Shoulder Extension): Permitting the elbows to swing forward and backward turns the strict isolation movement into a lat-dominant pull-down, bleeding mechanical tension entirely away from the triceps brachii.

Clinical Troubleshooting

Wrist Pain during Extension
The Fix: Ensure your wrists remain rigidly locked in a neutral position throughout the rep. Avoid excessively flexing or extending the wrist at the bottom of the movement, which places stress on the radiocarpal joint. Switch to a rope attachment if straight bar discomfort persists.
Inability to Feel the Triceps Contracting
The Fix: Reduce the weight on the stack by roughly 20%. Focus your intent entirely on forcefully locking out the elbow (terminal extension) and pausing for one full second at the absolute bottom of every repetition to maximize motor unit recruitment.

Biomechanically Similar Alternatives

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use a rope or a straight bar for tricep pushdowns?

A straight bar or V-bar allows for a higher absolute mechanical load due to enhanced wrist stability. A rope attachment, however, permits terminal pronation and a slightly larger range of motion at the bottom, which can intensely engage the lateral head of the triceps brachii.

Why is it important to keep my elbows pinned to my sides?

Pinning the elbows restricts the movement entirely to elbow extension. If your elbows drift forward and backward, you introduce shoulder extension into the movement, which shifts the load onto the latissimus dorsi and posterior deltoid, removing tension from the triceps.

Does the cable pushdown target all three heads of the triceps?

The pushdown engages all three heads, but because the shoulder is in a neutral position (arm at the side), the long head is not optimally stretched. The medial and lateral heads receive the most prominent hypertrophic stimulus. Overhead extensions are required to fully bias the long head.

Evidence-Based Citations

  1. Kholinne, E., Zulkarnain, R. F., Sun, Y. C., Lim, S., Chun, J. M., & Jeon, I. H. (2018). The different role of each head of the triceps brachii muscle in elbow extension. Acta orthopaedica et traumatologica turcica, 52(3), 201–205. [Kholinne, 2018]
  2. Alves, D., Matta, T., & Oliveira, L. (2018). Effect of shoulder position on triceps brachii heads activity in dumbbell elbow extension exercises. The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness, 58(9), 1247-1252. [Alves, 2018]