Standing Cable Bicep Curl

Standing Cable Bicep Curl

isolationbeginnertier1cable

Safety Rating for 40+

Knee:SafeShoulder:SafeBack:SafeWrist:Safe

Benefits for 40+

The constant cable resistance protects the elbow joints by eliminating jerky load peaks that occur with free weights – especially relevant after 40 when tendons lose elasticity and become more susceptible to epicondylitis. This isolation exercise enables targeted muscle building against age-related sarcopenia with minimal systemic stress, respecting the extended recovery times after 40. Safe to train to failure, which facilitates RPE calibration.

Form Cues

  1. Keep elbows fixed at your sides – only forearms move
  2. Curl and extend under control – no momentum from the torso
  3. Full extension at bottom, maximum contraction at top – hold 1 sec

Common Mistakes

  1. Swinging from hips or back – increased risk of lower back irritation for 40+
  2. Elbows drifting forward – shifts load to anterior deltoid and unloads the biceps
  3. Too fast eccentric phase – controlled eccentrics are crucial for tendon adaptation after 40
  4. Wrists bending backward – increases stress on wrist flexors and can aggravate epicondylitis symptoms

Modifications

Beginner

Perform single-arm to focus on correct technique. Light weight, 15–20 reps to learn the movement pattern.

For Joint Issues

For elbow issues (epicondylitis): significantly reduce weight, use rope attachment instead of bar for neutral grip. Respect pain-free ROM – don't force full extension.

Advanced

Drop sets on cable (quick weight change via pin adjustment). 21s method: 7 reps lower half, 7 reps upper half, 7 reps full ROM.

Scientific Basis

Constant cable resistance throughout full ROM – unlike dumbbells which lose tension at top and bottom. High SFR, safe to train to failure (RPE 8–10). Isolation exercises per research ideal for volume accumulation.

Contraindications

  • Acute medial epicondylitis (golfer's elbow) – underhand grip stresses the medial tendons
  • Acute biceps tendon inflammation – wait for complete healing
  • Significant wrist pain during supination – switch to neutral grip (rope)

Related Exercises

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