Endura

Cable Pull Through Strength Standards Calculator

A good Cable Pull Through result is usually Intermediate or Advanced: for men, Intermediate starts at 0.55x bodyweight and Advanced starts at 0.82x, while for women, Intermediate starts at 0.40x and Advanced starts at 0.62x.

Use the calculator when your reps match the Cable Pull Through rules: a low cable, rope or handle between the legs, stable stance, controlled hip hinge, long arms, braced trunk, controlled tall finish, and controlled return, with no deadlifts, RDLs, good mornings, hip thrusts, kettlebell swings, squatting, rowing, rounded-back reps, ballistic hip snap, cable rebound, or partial range.

Enter your bodyweight, the weight you used, and reps to see your estimated 1RM, bodyweight ratio, current level, and next target.

Understanding Your Cable Pull Through Strength Score

Your Cable Pull Through strength score is estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight, using strict cable hip-hinge pull-through using selected low-cable resistance. The result ranks strict standing low-cable hip hinge, not general gym strength or every nearby movement.

For example, a 180 lb male reaches Advanced around 148 lb and Elite around 194 lb. A 140 lb female reaches Advanced around 87 lb and Elite around 118 lb when the same strict movement rules are preserved.

Those examples only matter when every counted rep uses a low cable, rope or handle between the legs, stable stance, controlled hip hinge, long arms, braced trunk, controlled tall finish, and controlled return. A higher number made with deadlifts, RDLs, good mornings, hip thrusts, kettlebell swings, squatting, rowing, rounded-back reps, ballistic hip snap, cable rebound, or partial range is not a stronger standards result for this calculator.

The calculator is useful because it turns one repeatable exercise setup into a bodyweight-relative score. Use it for same-setup retests, coaching decisions, and comparison with nearby tools, not for copying another exercise into this calculator.

Cable Pull Through Strength Standards

Cable Pull Through strength standards convert estimated 1RM-to-bodyweight ratio into Beginner, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, Elite, and Stretch benchmarks. Use the table for your sex, choose the nearest bodyweight row, then compare your estimated 1RM with the listed targets.

These tables assume same low cable station, attachment, stance distance, stance width, grip, hinge depth, body angle, and finish. Different equipment friction, station geometry, attachment length, or body position can change effective resistance, so same-setup retests are the cleanest comparison.

Men’s Cable Pull Through Strength Standards

BodyweightNoviceIntermediateAdvancedEliteStretch
120 lb42 lb66 lb98 lb130 lb+156 lb
130 lb46 lb72 lb107 lb140 lb+169 lb
140 lb49 lb77 lb115 lb151 lb+182 lb
150 lb53 lb83 lb123 lb162 lb+195 lb
160 lb56 lb88 lb131 lb173 lb+208 lb
170 lb59 lb94 lb139 lb184 lb+221 lb
180 lb63 lb99 lb148 lb194 lb+234 lb
190 lb67 lb105 lb156 lb205 lb+247 lb
200 lb70 lb110 lb164 lb216 lb+260 lb
210 lb74 lb116 lb172 lb227 lb+273 lb
220 lb77 lb121 lb180 lb238 lb+286 lb
230 lb81 lb127 lb189 lb248 lb+299 lb
240 lb84 lb132 lb197 lb259 lb+312 lb
250 lb88 lb138 lb205 lb270 lb+325 lb
260 lb91 lb143 lb213 lb281 lb+338 lb

Women’s Cable Pull Through Strength Standards

BodyweightNoviceIntermediateAdvancedEliteStretch
100 lb25 lb40 lb62 lb84 lb+102 lb
110 lb28 lb44 lb68 lb92 lb+112 lb
120 lb30 lb48 lb74 lb101 lb+122 lb
130 lb33 lb52 lb81 lb109 lb+133 lb
140 lb35 lb56 lb87 lb118 lb+143 lb
150 lb38 lb60 lb93 lb126 lb+153 lb
160 lb40 lb64 lb99 lb134 lb+163 lb
170 lb43 lb68 lb105 lb143 lb+173 lb
180 lb45 lb72 lb112 lb151 lb+184 lb
190 lb48 lb76 lb118 lb160 lb+194 lb
200 lb50 lb80 lb124 lb168 lb+204 lb
210 lb53 lb84 lb130 lb176 lb+214 lb
220 lb55 lb88 lb136 lb185 lb+224 lb

For men, Beginner below 0.35x, Novice 0.35x to below 0.55x, Intermediate 0.55x to below 0.82x, Advanced 0.82x to below 1.08x, Elite 1.08x and above, stretch benchmark 1.30x. For women, Beginner below 0.25x, Novice 0.25x to below 0.40x, Intermediate 0.40x to below 0.62x, Advanced 0.62x to below 0.84x, Elite 0.84x and above, stretch benchmark 1.02x. Exact threshold values count as the higher listed level, so a ratio equal to the Advanced or Elite boundary earns that level.

How the Cable Pull Through Calculator Works

The Cable Pull Through calculator estimates 1RM from the entered weight and reps, divides that estimate by bodyweight, then compares the ratio with sex-specific standards. Ratio = estimated 1RM / bodyweight.

If a 180 lb male records a 194 lb single, the ratio reaches the Elite threshold. If he records a lighter weight for multiple reps, the shared e1RM helper estimates a single-rep equivalent before the bodyweight comparison is made.

If a 140 lb female records 118 lb, the ratio reaches Elite for women. A result below the next threshold shows exactly how much estimated 1RM is needed to advance.

The calculation only applies to Cable Pull Through reps using a low cable, rope or handle between the legs, stable stance, controlled hip hinge, long arms, braced trunk, controlled tall finish, and controlled return. Do not enter other exercise results, per-side values when the spec requires a total, assisted reps, partials, or values borrowed from a different setup.

How to Improve Your Cable Pull Through

You improve your Cable Pull Through score by raising estimated 1RM while preserving same low cable station, attachment, stance distance, stance width, grip, hinge depth, body angle, and finish. The first step is to identify the limiter before adding more weight.

If the range shortens, reduce the weight and rebuild the hardest position. If body position shifts, slow the rep and make the return identical every time. If the cable rebounds or the stack slams, pause the set and retest with cleaner control.

A lifter at 180 lb moving from a valid 148 lb estimate to a valid 194 lb estimate moves from Advanced toward Elite. The same jump should be rejected when it comes from deadlifts, RDLs, good mornings, hip thrusts, kettlebell swings, squatting, rowing, rounded-back reps, ballistic hip snap, cable rebound, or partial range.

Progress is most reliable when the same setup produces a better score over weeks, not when the setup quietly changes. Keep notes on station, attachment, stance, range, and finish so the calculator measures strength instead of setup drift.

Elite Cable Pull Through Strength Levels

Elite Cable Pull Through strength starts at 1.08x bodyweight for men and 0.84x bodyweight for women. Stretch benchmarks sit higher at 1.30x for men and 1.02x for women.

At 180 lb bodyweight, the male Elite benchmark is about 194 lb estimated 1RM and the stretch benchmark is about 234 lb. At 140 lb bodyweight, the female Elite benchmark is about 118 lb and the stretch benchmark is about 143 lb.

Elite status proves the tested movement remains strong under strict conditions. It does not count when the number is inflated by deadlifts, RDLs, good mornings, hip thrusts, kettlebell swings, squatting, rowing, rounded-back reps, ballistic hip snap, cable rebound, or partial range, because those changes alter what the calculator is meant to rank.

Cable Pull Through Strength Compared to Other Lifts

Cable Pull Through comparisons are useful for weakness detection, not for copying standards from one calculator into another. Nearby tools change support, path, grip, implement, range, or muscle contribution, which is why the comparison table focuses on contrast rather than substitution.

Related MovementComparison PurposeKey DifferenceWhat The Gap Reveals
Romanian Deadliftclosest barbell hinge anchorbarbell weight and vertical path are not cable resistanceAn RDL comparison shows hinge strength with free weights, but the cable path and stance distance change the limiting position.
Barbell Hip Thrusthip-extension contextbench support and bar position change the liftA hip-thrust gap can reveal stronger end-range hip extension, yet bench support and bar placement make that standard separate.
Good Morninghinge position contrastbar-on-back leverage differs from a low cableA good-morning comparison checks hinge control under a different lever, not a target for low-cable resistance.
Deadliftheavy posterior-chain ceilingdeadlift loads should remain far above cable accessory scoresDeadlift numbers should be much higher; a narrow gap suggests the pull-through may be tested too loosely or with a friendlier setup.
Cable Crunchcable-stack setup warningsame stack numbers can feel different across stationsCable-crunch comparison is mainly an equipment warning because the same stack can feel different across stations and attachments.
Barbell Sumo Deadliftwide-stance hinge comparisonfree-weight floor pulling is not a pull-throughSumo pulling adds floor leverage and wide-stance strength, so it frames hierarchy without defining this accessory score.

Use these comparisons when the Cable Pull Through score does not match training expectations. A strong score in another tool can reveal a setup or control limitation here, but it cannot replace a strict Cable Pull Through test.

Milestones in Cable Pull Through Strength

Cable Pull Through milestones show when the bodyweight-ratio score moves from basic standards toward Advanced, Elite, and Stretch-level performance. Every milestone assumes the same setup, range, and strict rep rules.

Men’s MilestoneRatio180 lb TargetDecision Rule
Intermediate0.55x bodyweight99 lbBuild repeatable range before chasing Advanced.
Advanced0.82x bodyweight148 lbRetest only when the same setup is preserved.
Elite1.08x bodyweight194 lbReject any score raised by rebound or body swing.
Stretch Benchmark1.30x bodyweight234 lbUse as a long-range benchmark, not a shortcut target.
Women’s MilestoneRatio140 lb TargetDecision Rule
Intermediate0.40x bodyweight56 lbBuild repeatable range before chasing Advanced.
Advanced0.62x bodyweight87 lbRetest only when the same setup is preserved.
Elite0.84x bodyweight118 lbReject any score raised by rebound or assistance.
Stretch Benchmark1.02x bodyweight143 lbUse as a long-range benchmark, not a shortcut target.

Common Cable Pull Through Mistakes

Common Cable Pull Through mistakes are the errors that make a standards score inflated, deflated, or no longer comparable. The highest-risk mistake is changing the setup or range to make the number easier.

A 194 lb estimated 1RM at 180 lb bodyweight looks Elite on paper, but it should be rejected if the start range shortens, the finish changes, the body swings, or the cable rebounds into the next rep.

Short range removes the hardest portion of the exercise. Rebound and yanking convert control into momentum. Assistance from body position or setup changes shifts the limiter away from the intended muscles. Incorrect total-weight entry can also distort the interpreted score.

The fix is simple: choose a repeatable setup, count only clean reps, and stop the test as soon as the rep no longer matches the standard.

Cable Pull Through Form Tips

Cable Pull Through form starts with repeatable setup before any rep is counted. Set same low cable station, attachment, stance distance, stance width, grip, hinge depth, body angle, and finish so the movement tests the intended muscles rather than equipment manipulation.

Begin each rep from the same controlled start, move through the intended path, finish without body swing, and return under control. Avoid changing position mid-set.

Use the same setup before each retest. If a rep requires a shorter range, faster rebound, different attachment, or altered body angle, it belongs in training notes rather than in the standards calculator.

Before a test set, rehearse two or three submaximal reps and reject the attempt if the start position, finish, or return changes. Keep the same brace, pace, and path from the first counted rep through the last counted rep.

The goal is a result that can be retested under the same standard and compared honestly against the bodyweight table.

Cable Pull Through Training Tips

Train Cable Pull Through by matching progression to the first limiter that appears under strict conditions. Add resistance only when the same range, setup, finish, and controlled return survive the current work.

Someone who can repeat clean moderate sets should not jump to a heavier test if the last reps lose range. Use slower tempo for control, moderate sets for repeatability, and heavier singles only when the standard remains stable.

If setup shifts, reduce resistance and lock in station, attachment, stance, and distance from the stack. If one side or one joint position dominates, use slower reps and cleaner positioning before treating the attempt as a valid standards test.

Program the exercise with clear pass-fail rules: stop the heavy set when range, control, or finish changes; use back-off sets to practice the missed position; retest only after the same setup can be repeated without rushing.

Retest sparingly. A clean estimated 1RM increase on the same setup is more valuable than a larger number created by setup drift or rushed reps.

Related strength standards tools place Cable Pull Through inside a broader strength ecosystem. The goal is to compare what the current score may reveal, not to treat nearby tools as substitutions.

  • Romanian Deadlift is useful as a closest barbell hinge anchor; barbell weight and vertical path are not cable resistance, Use it to compare hip-hinge strength while remembering that bar path, grip, and free-weight balance make RDL scores much heavier.
  • Barbell Hip Thrust is useful as a hip-extension context; bench support and bar position change the lift, Use it to decide whether hip-extension strength is ahead of standing hinge control without borrowing the hip-thrust benchmark.
  • Good Morning is useful as a hinge position contrast; bar-on-back leverage differs from a low cable, Use it when back-position confidence is the question, because bar-on-back leverage exposes a different hinge demand.
  • Deadlift is useful as a heavy posterior-chain ceiling; deadlift loads should remain far above cable accessory scores, Use it as a high-load ceiling so the pull-through remains an accessory test rather than a disguised deadlift.
  • Cable Crunch is useful as a cable-stack setup warning; same stack numbers can feel different across stations, Use it to track cable-station consistency, pulley feel, rope length, and stack behavior across lower-body cable work.
  • Barbell Sumo Deadlift is useful as a wide-stance hinge comparison; free-weight floor pulling is not a pull-through, Use it to compare wide-stance posterior-chain strength while keeping floor pulls and low-cable hinge reps separate.

Use these tools as comparison lenses. They can show whether nearby strength is ahead of Cable Pull Through, but each calculator keeps its own movement rules.

FAQ

What is a good Cable Pull Through score?

A good Cable Pull Through score usually means at least Intermediate or Advanced for your sex and bodyweight. For men, Intermediate begins at 0.55x and Advanced begins at 0.82x; for women, Intermediate begins at 0.40x and Advanced begins at 0.62x.

How does the calculator rank exact threshold values?

Exact thresholds count as the higher listed standard. A male ratio of exactly 0.82x reaches Advanced, and a female ratio of exactly 0.84x reaches Elite.

Should I compare different cable stations directly?

Compare different cable stations cautiously because pulley ratio, friction, routing, attachment length, stack calibration, and body position can change effective resistance. Same-station retests are the cleanest progress checks.

Do I enter per-side weight?

Use the tool-specific rule from the spec. For this calculator, enter the selected weight for the tested set using the total-entry rule when the setup uses matched sides and the spec calls for a total.

Can I use other exercise results here?

No. Related tools are useful comparisons, but Cable Pull Through standards require a low cable, rope or handle between the legs, stable stance, controlled hip hinge, long arms, braced trunk, controlled tall finish, and controlled return. Results from another movement should stay in its own calculator.

Why is setup consistency so important?

Cable stations can feel different even when the number on the stack is the same. Consistent station, attachment, body position, range, and pace help the score reflect strength instead of equipment differences.

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