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Exercise Comparison

Bench Dips vs Tate Press

Bench Dips - starting position
Bench Dips - ending position
Bench Dips
beginner·Bodyweight·compound
Tate Press - starting position
Tate Press - ending position
Tate Press
intermediate·Dumbbell·isolation

Side-by-Side

Bench Dips
VS
Tate Press
beginner
Level
intermediate
Bodyweight
Equipment
Dumbbell
compound
Mechanic
isolation
push
Force
push
Strength
Category
Strength
triceps
Primary
triceps
chestshoulders
Secondary
chestshoulders

Muscle Analysis

Shared

tricepschestshoulders

Instructions

Bench Dips

1

For this exercise you will need to place a bench behind your back. With the bench perpendicular to your body, and while looking away from it, hold on to the bench on its edge with the hands fully extended, separated at shoulder width. The legs will be extended forward, bent at the waist and perpendicular to your torso. This will be your starting position.

2

Slowly lower your body as you inhale by bending at the elbows until you lower yourself far enough to where there is an angle slightly smaller than 90 degrees between the upper arm and the forearm. Tip: Keep the elbows as close as possible throughout the movement. Forearms should always be pointing down.

3

Using your triceps to bring your torso up again, lift yourself back to the starting position.

4

Repeat for the recommended amount of repetitions.

Tate Press

1

Lie down on a flat bench with a dumbbell in each hand on top of your thighs. The palms of your hand will be facing each other.

2

By using your thighs to help you get the dumbbells up, clean the dumbbells one arm at a time so that you can hold them in front of you at shoulder width. Note: when holding the dumbbells in front of you, make sure your arms are wider than shoulder width apart from each other using a pronated (palms forward) grip. Allow your elbows to point out. This is your starting position.

3

Keeping the upper arms stationary, slowly move the dumbbells in and down in a semi circular motion until they touch the upper chest while inhaling. Keep full control of the dumbbells at all times and do not move the upper arms nor rest the dumbbells on the chest.

4

As you breathe out, move the dumbbells up using your triceps and the same semi-circular motion but in reverse. Attempt to keep the dumbbells together as they move up. Lock your arms in the contracted position, hold for a second and then start coming down again slowly again. Tip: It should take at least twice as long to go down than to come up.

5

Repeat the movement for the prescribed amount of repetitions of your training program.

Verdict

Both exercises target the triceps. Bench Dips is a beginner exercise using bodyweight, while Tate Press is intermediate and uses dumbbell. Choose Bench Dips if you're looking for a more accessible option, or Tate Press for a greater challenge. Bench Dips is a compound movement working multiple joints, making it better for overall strength. Tate Press isolates the target muscle for focused development.

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