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darksidefitness
11-27-2012, 01:17 PM
Pronate Your Hands During Pressdowns
Rope pressdowns are a popular isolation move for the triceps, but what happens when you turn your hands down at the bottom of each rep?

By Jimmy Peña, MS, CSCS

STANDARD VERSION
Pressdowns are a common exercise in your battery of triceps movements. Because you’re working at only one joint — the elbow — and keeping your elbows in tight to your sides, it makes for an excellent isolation move either as a pre-exhaust technique or as a flushing exercise at the end of your workout. The rope allows you to use a neutral grip, making it slightly easier on the wrist and elbow joints than with a standard overhand grip.
MAKE THIS CHANGE
Much like the straight bar counterpart, rope pressdowns target the lateral (outer) head. Just make sure you use a rope attachment and cable that are long enough so that you can fully extend your arms out to the sides of your thighs at the bottom of the move. Because you begin with a neutral grip, you’re calling upon more of the medial head to initiate the exercise and there’s less pressure on your joints. However, as you approach the fully extended position, you have the opportunity to pronate your hands — you simply can’t using a bar — for even an even stronger contraction. Similar to supinating your wrists at the top of a biceps dumbbell curl, the pronation of your hands at the bottom will help blister the triceps with a phenomenal burn.
One quick tip:
Try not to wrap your thumbs around the rope. This will help you to use less of the forearm muscles and help you focus on pushing the weight down with just your triceps, particularly the lateral head.
GET THE BENEFITS FROM BOTH The act of pronating your wrists allows for a stronger contraction of the lateral head especially, but as fatigue sets in, turning your hands down on each rep becomes more difficult. Rather than just end your set when you can’t pronate your hands any longer, simply go ahead and do pressdowns without pronation as a way to extend the set, pumping out several more reps. Hence, you can do both variations within a single set.

darksidefitness
12-02-2012, 10:51 PM
The article is missing the control the weight all the weight going up and down and muscle specification. I see a lot of guys using the whole body instead of just the triceps...

sensitivenips
12-03-2012, 05:11 PM
pronating is good, and what i typically do in my tri routine. another change up i like to execute thats nice is rather than pushing down or to the hips try pushing outwards. great tip on the placement of your thumb, and how it reduces the usage of the forearms.

jurgensplurgen
12-03-2012, 05:31 PM
^^ the thumbs, I think I'll try that today.

baldwinb
12-04-2012, 01:50 PM
I've been doing the thumb out thing for awhile and it has been working great

darksidefitness
12-04-2012, 03:13 PM
Good deal. Let us know how works out for you!


^^ the thumbs, I think I'll try that today.

alinshop
12-10-2012, 08:03 PM
Need to try that myself