
Triceps Pushdown (Rope)
Safety Rating for 40+
Benefits for 40+
The neutral rope grip is significantly more wrist-friendly than the pronated bar variant – especially valuable given the increasing tendency toward epicondylitis and wrist stiffness after 40. Pulling the rope ends apart at the bottom additionally activates the lateral triceps head, enabling higher muscle stimulus at the same weight. High SFR with minimal joint stress – the ideal combination for volume accumulation against age-related sarcopenia.
Form Cues
- Rope at high cable, thumbs pointing up (neutral grip)
- Push down and pull rope apart at the bottom
- The pull-apart movement at the end additionally activates the lateral head
Common Mistakes
- Rope not pulled apart at the bottom – wastes the additional contraction and the main advantage of the rope variant
- Wrists rotating out of neutral position – neutral grip must be maintained throughout
- Elbows drifting away from body with heavier weight – reduces triceps isolation
- Too fast movement – the pull-apart component requires deliberate tempo
Modifications
Beginner
Light weight, focus on the pull-apart movement at the end. Only increase weight once this is coordinated.
For Joint Issues
For elbow issues: limit ROM to 90° (no full flexion). Rope variant is already more wrist-friendly than bar. For persistent pain: machine triceps extension.
Advanced
Drop sets with quick pin adjustment. Or: overhead variant at low cable (cable overhead extension) for additional stretch component.
Scientific Basis
Neutral grip is more wrist-friendly than bar. Pulling rope ends apart at the bottom forces an additional contraction. Complements the bar variant through a different grip angle – both together cover more triceps fibers.
Contraindications
- Acute elbow joint inflammation – even with neutral grip, extension stresses the joint capsule
- Acute tendon inflammation at the triceps insertion (olecranon) – full extension is painful
- Carpal tunnel syndrome – rope grip loading can worsen symptoms


