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Thread: Official Newbie Bowflex Search
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02-07-2009, 11:24 AM #31
- Join Date: Oct 2008
- Location: Paw Paw, Michigan, United States
- Age: 41
- Posts: 1,782
- Rep Power: 917
Shouldn't you be lifting something heavy instead of reading this?
[]---[] Equipment Crew Member No. 8
Workout Equipment Crew: We do it on Power Racks
Bashing the Bowflex since 2008 for DiamondDelts
Bulldozer feeds upon the weaker as they fall. Bulldozer crushes all! - Machine Head
Owes me a case of beer: dolson27
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02-07-2009, 12:23 PM #32
Huh? I realize I didn't put any happy faces in my post, but go back and reread it....slowly. Most of the new guys on here come into a thread like this and defend in some manner or another, the precious bowflex. You did not, you beat on it. I liked that.
I F'ing hate the bowflex for exactly the reasons you posted about. My post was supposed to be funny. The "big brain on stillbroker comment" was a throwback to Pulp Fiction.....one of my favorite movies.
I was giving you a sideways, behind the back, sarcastic compliment.
I also have a total gym and a gazelle. I had a thigh master, but it gave me calluses, so I gave it to my mom so she could work on her grip strength.
And the whole gym setup cost me $5360.36 including tax and shipping/handling as I bought everything from the TV ads.
Thanks for getting my back, but I think Stillbroker and I will be ok.▪█─────█▪ Equipment Crew #4 ▪█─────█▪
Ivanko Crew #9
York Barbell Crew #13
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02-07-2009, 10:55 PM #33
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02-08-2009, 06:23 AM #34
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02-08-2009, 07:56 AM #35
- Join Date: Oct 2004
- Location: Flint, Michigan, United States
- Posts: 8,921
- Rep Power: 21462
there needs to be a "sarcasm warning" at the top of the page or something. it seems that keetman gets everyone's panties in a bunch.
"If there must be trouble let it be in my day, that my child may have peace." -Thomas Paine
[]---[]Equipment Crew Member No.3[]---[]
()---() York Barbell Club #2 ()---()
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02-08-2009, 09:53 AM #36
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02-08-2009, 10:25 AM #37
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02-08-2009, 11:19 AM #38
- Join Date: Oct 2008
- Location: Paw Paw, Michigan, United States
- Age: 41
- Posts: 1,782
- Rep Power: 917
Maybe we all need official titles? Keetman can be "flame thrower" Hk can be "negtrain conducter" etc..
Shouldn't you be lifting something heavy instead of reading this?
[]---[] Equipment Crew Member No. 8
Workout Equipment Crew: We do it on Power Racks
Bashing the Bowflex since 2008 for DiamondDelts
Bulldozer feeds upon the weaker as they fall. Bulldozer crushes all! - Machine Head
Owes me a case of beer: dolson27
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02-08-2009, 12:23 PM #39
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02-08-2009, 12:48 PM #40
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02-08-2009, 12:51 PM #41
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02-08-2009, 09:56 PM #42
Hey, I just posted an article on ezine that is technically critical of the Bowflex. You guys may get a kick out of it. If this thread is still open in a few days I will post a link to it (after it gets through review and is published).
Just in case you need a some empirical evidence to use as future fodder other than Keetman's profanity and esoteric sarcasm.
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02-08-2009, 10:39 PM #43
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02-08-2009, 10:51 PM #44
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02-08-2009, 10:54 PM #45
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02-08-2009, 11:05 PM #46
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02-08-2009, 11:13 PM #47
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02-12-2009, 07:33 PM #48
- Join Date: Mar 2008
- Location: Gainesville, Virginia, United States
- Posts: 890
- Rep Power: 811
I don't have any Bowflex questions but I've been a member now since like last March I believe and I still don't know how to insert those little icons into the message section. That's why most of my posts have
icons because that is the only one I know how to post lol Can somebody please enlighten me on how to position these icons?
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02-12-2009, 08:37 PM #49
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02-12-2009, 09:32 PM #50
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02-14-2009, 09:32 AM #51
- Join Date: Feb 2008
- Location: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
- Age: 62
- Posts: 496
- Rep Power: 276
Hey don't knock the Bowflex. Its a good piece of equipment. I say this for when I was working out at home I had about 200 on the bar on free weights and went to failure and had to tilt the bar to get out from under it(I learned early on not to put sleeves on when training alone). Cracks some of the ceiling as the plates slid off the bar on to the floor above the dining room. With the Bowflex I no longer have that issue.
I do think a combination is important of freeweights and pulleys/Bowflex.
Is it expensive? Well getting a gym membership and going 10 x out of the year is expensive. And some of the people who outfit their garages on this site have spent more than the $2000, I had spent. I do use my bowflex 4x a week and sometimes more. So to me and probably the older couple getting rid of their old equipment its a great deal. But to some it may be a coat hanger or in the back of someone's closet, and that there is the problem with any equipment people purchase.
Does slick marketing sell the equipment? Remember the soloflex? That was the beginning of the marketing blitz for home equipment. Then there was the nordic track, then the bowflex. How about hammer strength machines? Do they not have a marketing campaign? So the answer is yes to create an awareness. Most people do not buy machines based on the adds. They usually look at sites like this and others that break down and inform us if they really do what they say they do(consumer reports). Then some actually try it out if they can. I can only hope that that is the process that people do when looking at exercise equipment.
Keep on B-flexing!
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02-14-2009, 09:50 AM #52
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02-14-2009, 10:03 AM #53
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02-14-2009, 10:08 AM #54
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02-14-2009, 10:11 AM #55
So you have a history of choosing the wrong equipment? What a testimony! LOL. Stand alone bench presses suck too, just for this reason......there may be a very credible point to everyone here telling people to get a rack.
The only way a bowflex is cost efficient is if its purchased used, period. I hope people come here for info and reviews of the bowflex.....they'll go out of business.
No flames intended, your exuberence is just funny. A rack, bench, weights, and bar will be cheaper and do more for you....even if purchased new. They are safe, effective, and don't take up any more room.
Keep on no-flexing.▪█─────█▪ Equipment Crew #4 ▪█─────█▪
Ivanko Crew #9
York Barbell Crew #13
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02-14-2009, 10:52 AM #56
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02-14-2009, 11:16 AM #57
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02-14-2009, 11:41 AM #58
- Join Date: Feb 2008
- Location: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
- Age: 62
- Posts: 496
- Rep Power: 276
Ah so I get it you need a big space to place the rack and then you acquire a decent bench to go inside the rack and then you place the weights on the bar. I see. So let me see I have to go out and purchase a rack. Move it to the place where I will be exercising in my home. Already does not seem convenient. And then get a bench to go underneath.
If I had to do all that my wife would have shown me the door. I would still be in the gym if I was using free-weights only. Due to there are others who can spot me. At home with the rack in a small house, with my kids about- seems like a recipe for disaster.
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02-14-2009, 11:43 AM #59
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02-14-2009, 11:56 AM #60
Yea I read your post and I read that you like to not use collars (a safety feature) and drop the weights off the bar when you go to failure. That's all very unsafe.
Sometimes people are confused by the term "rack". Its standardly used for pretty much anything that stands upright, holds a barbell, and allows the user to press or squat. Around here, the term usually refers to a full cage with four uprights. Its probably not correct for us to refer to it that way because it can be confusing. But it is what it is.
A full cage, as Domer has explained, allows the user to safely lift to failure while using collars. The safety spotters are designed to catch the bar if the weight is too much. It works with benching, squating, pulls, and overhead presses. Because the spotters run front to back from upright to upright, they can not miss the dropped bar and will protect the user in the event of a failure.
I assumed you were using a standard bench press when you dropped the weight. Bench press units do not typically have a full safety spotters and the user must take other precautions to keep from eating the barbell.
A full cage is safe up to its max capacity. If you were using one when you had to side drop weights, you were using it incorrectly. If you were using a bench press, you're right, they're not safe. But that is not what I was refering to.
Again, you can do more effective work, just as safely, for a cheaper buy in price with freeweights. I have no doubt the bowflex will do something for someone who uses it on a regular basis. Its just too expensive for what it does and there are many cheaper options.▪█─────█▪ Equipment Crew #4 ▪█─────█▪
Ivanko Crew #9
York Barbell Crew #13
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