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Home Gym
Equipment
You can enjoy
all the benefits of gym membership - a wide variety of
equipment and facilities, good advice from staff and other
members and the incentive to work out by making the gym a
destination. But, you can also enjoy having the ease of access
and the absence of a commute by purchasing home gym
equipment.
But what to
buy?
If you're just
getting into, or back into, a fitness routine, you should hold
off purchasing anything. Using relatively new professional
equipment, under the guidance of a knowledgeable instructor,
will give you a good basis for comparison when
shopping.
One of the
first pieces of equipment anyone interested in weight training
will want is, naturally, a set of weights.
Free weights
can be purchased for very little money - a basic set is often
under $50. You'll want a mixture of small, 10 lb (4.5 kg) and
20 lb (9 kg) hand-held dumbbells and a bar with larger,
exchangeable weights. Just about any bar is as good as another,
but weights can be either metal or plastic. Some people like
the old-fashioned clink of metal, but plastic weights (usually
composite or sand-filled) are marginally
safer.
At some point,
you'll want to 'graduate' to a weight machine. They offer the
ability to focus on specific muscle groups - biceps,
quadriceps, deltoids and others - in a much safer way than free
weights can. Also, some muscle groups - calves or hamstrings,
for example - are harder to work using free
weights.
Once you're
ready for a weight machine, be prepared to spend some serious
cash. Costs and configurations vary. Some are just simple
resistance machines, essentially composite rubber stretching
straps that allow for some adjustment to the tension. These run
a few hundred dollars. Others are multi-station, adjustable
weight stacks, often costing from $1,800 to $5,000 or
more.
Stair steppers
are becoming increasingly popular. A very simple model can run
anywhere from $80-$150. It offers you the ability to get a good
cardiovascular workout in a small space at home with low joint
impact, while you build thighs and calves. Beware anything that
looks like too good a deal, though. Reliability is key here,
otherwise you've spent $100 for nothing when it breaks two
months after purchase.
Some stair
steppers run as high as $1,700 or more. At this level you
should be getting a lot more than just the ability to simulate
walking up stairs. Apart from reliability and handrails, which
should be rock solid for 5 years or more, you should be able to
adjust resistance level, speed, angle, and distance between the
pedals. You should also get a heart rate monitor and other
digital readouts (speed, distance climbed, calories burned,
etc) as part of the package.
Treadmills,
too, are becoming a more common part of the home gym. Since
they run anywhere from a few hundred dollars to $2,000 or more,
you should expect to get a lot for your
money.
Again, they
should be completely smooth working, stable and reliable for
several years. A good treadmill should have a great, non-slip
surface and it should be able to go faster and offer more
resistance than you could ever use as you build
up.
Like stair
steppers, it should come with an impressive panel of controls
and digital gauges. Any treadmill that costs over $1,000 should
have, at minimum, adjustments for and measurements of speed and
distance 'walked'. It should include calories burned, with
tailoring based on age, weight, etc. A heart rate monitor is a
great plus.
Of course, if
you plan to spend several thousand dollars to acquire home gym
equipment, you should be prepared to dedicate yourself to a
consistent, regular workout. But that's something no
manufacturer can guarantee.
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