Exercise Database
Cable Exercises
Explore cable exercises for smooth tension, precise line-of-pull adjustments, and easier hypertrophy work across the whole body.
Muscle Groups
cable bent overhead tricep extension
cable seated rear lateral raise
cable shrug
cable incline fly
cable one arm tricep pushdown
cable lying fly
cable front raise
cable one arm lateral raise
cable seated row
cable one arm side triceps pushdown
cable twist
cable overhead curl
cable biceps curl (sz bar)
cable one arm curl
cable low chest fly
cable seated one arm row
cable rear delt row
lat prayer
cable pushdown(with rope)
cable crossover reverse fly
cable curl
cable overhead triceps extension
cable lying triceps extension
cable standing fly
cable reverse grip triceps pushdown(sz-bar)
cable standing rear delt row
cable straigth arm pulldown(rope)
cable straight arm pulldown(bar)
cable low seated row
cable triceps pushdown(SZ bar)
cable lateral raise
cable lying triceps extension(low)
cable standing crossovers
cable hammer curl(rope)
cable pulldown(v-bar)
cable seated row(rope)
cable reverse curl
cable pull through
cable lying pullover
cable bench press
cable incline bench press
cable triceps pushdown(v-bar)
cable upright row
cable hip adduction
cable kneeling crunch
Overview
What to know before you pick a cable exercise
Cable training is valuable because it keeps resistance on the target area through more of the rep and makes it easy to fine-tune angle, stance, and setup. That flexibility is hard to match with fixed free-weight paths.
This collection is ideal when you want controlled accessory volume, joint-friendly pressing or pulling variations, or reliable isolation work that stays hard without large setup demands.
Selection Guide
How to choose the right option from this collection
Use cables for line-of-pull freedom
If a dumbbell or machine path feels awkward, cables often let you find a cleaner angle that matches your structure better.
Use them to keep tension consistent
Many lifters like cables when free weights lose tension at one end of the rep or when machine settings feel too restrictive.
Choose cables for lower-fatigue volume
They are excellent for adding work late in the session without stacking much systemic fatigue on top of the main lifts.
Programming Notes
How to program cable work without guesswork
Pair cables with compounds
A strong setup is to do your heavy press, squat, or pull first, then use cable work to add focused volume exactly where you still need it.
Treat setup as part of progression
Handle height, stance, and body position all change the feel, so keep them consistent if you want the progression to mean something.
Use moderate reps generously
Cables are especially useful in the 10 to 20 rep range where tension quality matters more than maximal output.
Mistakes
Common cable training mistakes
- •Changing the setup every workout so progress becomes impossible to compare.
- •Standing too far from the stack and turning clean reps into balance drills.
- •Using cables only for fluff work instead of meaningful accessories with clear progression.
FAQ
Questions people ask about cable exercises
Are cable exercises good for muscle growth?
Yes. They are often excellent for hypertrophy because they make it easier to keep tension high and standardize reps with less joint irritation.
Should cables replace free weights?
Usually no. They work best as complements that fill gaps, add cleaner volume, or offer angles free weights do not cover well.
What rep range works best for cable exercises?
Moderate and higher reps are common, but the key is using a load that still lets you control the path and feel the target area working.
Why do cable exercises feel easier on the joints?
Because you can often adjust the angle, stance, and grip to suit your structure instead of forcing one fixed path.