Climbers talk a lot about fingers, pulleys, and tendons —
but tendons don’t generate force.
The forearm flexor system does.
Understanding these muscles explains:
- why some climbers feel pump earlier
- why finger strength plateaus
- why grip positions change forearm activation
- why wrist angle influences everything
- why rest times matter
- why technique can reduce or multiply load
This is the simple, climber-focused breakdown.

1. The two engines of finger flexion: FDS & FDP muscle bellies
The tendons you use on the wall (FDS & FDP) come from muscle bellies in the forearm.
FDP muscle bellies (deep flexors)
- slow, powerful, high-force fibers
- drive fingertip pulling strength
- dominant in open hand, drag, and small edges
- fatigue slowly but recover slowly
- overloaded by DIP collapse → fingertip stress
FDS muscle bellies (superficial flexors)
- more explosive
- stabilizing and supportive
- dominant in half-crimp
- protect the PIP joint and A2 pulley
- fatigue faster but recover quicker
- overloaded by PIP collapse → A2 stress
Simple rule:
👉 FDP = force
👉 FDS = stability
Good climbing requires both.
2. The wrist flexors: the hidden load amplifiers
These muscles are rarely discussed by climbers, but they matter enormously:
- Flexor Carpi Radialis (FCR)
- Flexor Carpi Ulnaris (FCU)
- Palmaris Longus (PL)
They control:
- how much tension you can generate through the finger chain
- how stable your wrist is (wrist collapse destroys force transfer)
- whether small edges feel “solid” or “sketchy”
- how fast your forearms pump
Weak wrist flexors =
→ less grip strength
→ worse angle control
→ faster fatigue
→ more tendon compensation
Wrist position is a mechanical multiplier.
3. How forearm rotation changes finger mechanics
Forearm rotation changes how the flexor system aligns with your fingers.
Supination (palm facing you)
- most efficient flexor alignment
- stronger half-crimp
- safer for small edges
- more stable PIP angles
- better force transfer
Pronation (palm facing away)
- flexors lose mechanical advantage
- pulleys see more shear load
- FDP takes more fingertip strain
- grip feels sharper or unstable
- fatigue shows up faster
This explains why the same hold feels easier in one wrist angle and worse in another.
4. Why some climbers pump faster than others
It’s almost never “bad blood flow.”
It’s mechanics, mostly:
- Excessive FDP activation (open hand on small edges)
- Wrist collapse changing the force line
- Co-contraction of flexors and extensors
- Lack of FDS control → FDP compensates → early fatigue
Pump =
→ inefficient force transfer
→ poor wrist alignment
→ high compensatory muscle activity
It is mechanical, not purely muscular.
5. Why forearm strength ≠ finger strength
Many climbers think:
“If I strengthen my forearms, my fingers get stronger.”
Not necessarily.
Forearm flexors supply the power,
but the finger structures decide:
- how much force actually arrives
- how safely it is distributed
- how stable the grip remains
Finger strength is forearm power + joint stability + tendon balance + angle control.
If mechanics fail:
more forearm strength → more tendon and pulley stress.
6. How training changes FDP/FDS balance
Your training choices determine which tendon system becomes dominant.
Training that increases FDP dominance
- drag grip
- open-hand hangs
- small-edge work
- high-tension fingertip recruitment
- repeater sessions
Training that increases FDS stability
- controlled half-crimp isometrics
- slow positive loading
- PIP angle-stability drills
- mid-edge hangs (15–20 mm)
- avoiding PIP collapse under fatigue
Training that increases wrist flexor contribution
- neutral-wrist hangs
- wrist flexion strength work
- pronation/supination control
- preventing wrist collapse under load
Top climbers don’t just train “finger strength” —
they train finger engines + stability engines + wrist engines together.
Putting it all together
The forearm flexor system is the true source of finger force.
- FDP muscle belly = deep pulling power
- FDS muscle belly = joint stability and support
- Wrist flexors = tension transfer and grip security
These muscles determine:
- how strong your fingers feel
- how stable your grip is
- how fast fatigue appears
- how safely load reaches the pulleys
- how consistent your climbing position is
Finger strength is not isolated —
it’s the output of a chain, and this chain begins in the forearm.