Running Machines
Author
Discussion

Landlord

Original Poster:

12,689 posts

277 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Right - I am living away during the week now, meaning Landlady isn't able to get out to do her run of an evening (due to babysitting). Therefore, she's thinking about getting a running machine (probably used "off of" eBay).

Now - does anyone know their stuff about running machines? What to look for to ensure quality. Brands? etc.

Any help greatly appreciated.

Cheers,
Phil.

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

262 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Cool, beers?

soad

34,200 posts

196 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Hateful things. No substitute for a real run in the park, can she change her running times? Go in the morning/afternoon instead.

Landlord

Original Poster:

12,689 posts

277 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
soad said:
Hateful things. No substitute for a real run in the park, can she change her running times? Go in the morning/afternoon instead.
No - see "kids" mentioned earlier (both below school age)

She'll still run at the weekends but needs/wants an "in home" solution.

Landlord

Original Poster:

12,689 posts

277 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Justayellowbadge said:
Cool, beers?
Aye. Would seem appropriate. smile

Have you got my BarCap email? If not, text me yours and I'll send it on.

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

262 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Landlord said:
Justayellowbadge said:
Cool, beers?
Aye. Would seem appropriate. smile

Have you got my BarCap email? If not, text me yours and I'll send it on.
Profile--> Email.

isee

3,713 posts

203 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Landlord said:
Right - I am living away during the week now, meaning Landlady isn't able to get out to do her run of an evening (due to babysitting). Therefore, she's thinking about getting a running machine (probably used "off of" eBay).

Now - does anyone know their stuff about running machines? What to look for to ensure quality. Brands? etc.

Any help greatly appreciated.

Cheers,
Phil.
I bought a "cheapie" rebok one online. it may not be particularly advanced but looked nice and on paper did all i needed (i.e. spin the belt). urns out it is nigh on unusable since I am literally at it's max weight spec and it's not a problem because i too heavy for the frame or anything. But when my leading foot lands it carries teh opposite momentum to the belt and the mass behind it means the engine spinnign the belt does not cope therefore i atually stop the belt's motion for a fraction of a second. that in turn means I have to run in an unnatural way and make sure my leading foot lands in a more genteel manner. making proper fast running impossible because if i do that and i am not holding onto the handlebars and I forget myself for a second, i seriously risk falling over byt he brief but sudden stopping of the belt.


keep that in mind and if the landlady is close to the max designed range for the treadmill, get a heavier duty one or you will be wasting your money.

southendpier

5,955 posts

249 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
Tunturi T20 - should be able to get one from around £600 with warranty - heart monitors heavy duty build, auto-inclines, loads of programs, same as you get in many gyms.

Had mine for a few years and Mrs Pier uses it because she can't stand gyms and has kids to deal with etc. so has to be flexible about when she exercises.

bazking69

8,620 posts

210 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
A cheap one will be rubbish. An expensive one will be a massive investment that usually goes wasted on most people.

I appreciate her situation but I'd rather keep the money in my pocket and go for a run outdoors as and when I could.

HundredthIdiot

4,477 posts

304 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
I use indoor trainers for both running and cycling. I am more of a cyclist than a runner.

For cycling, it enables me to train in icy weather and whilst being homebound after the kids have gone to bed (wife often works late).

For running, it enables even pacing and is useful for very fast paced efforts with (I feel) a lower risk of injury. I have only used treadmills in gyms. I probably do one treadmill session in a week (plus 3 or 4 outdoor runs), typically short efforts (e.g. 5k at threshold + warm up/down). I can do 180bpm on a treadmill without straining anything, but find it difficult to sustain the same level of effort on the road.

If I wasn't a cyclist I would definitely consider buying a decent treadmill for the home.

This doesn't answer your question regarding product recommendations, I'm just supporting the contention that they can be useful for people who are home-bound with kids.

Sixpackpert

4,988 posts

234 months

Monday 1st February 2010
quotequote all
What would happen if you put a plane on...

ninja-lewis

5,093 posts

210 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
Could she take the children with her? There's a group of mums who go jogging in the local park while pushing babies in prams/buggies.

trv8

311 posts

227 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
I have this one...
http://www.treadmill-running-machine-review.co.uk/...

Plenty good enough for what I need, I've had it a couple of years with no problems with it.

trv8

311 posts

227 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
isee said:
Landlord said:
Right - I am living away during the week now, meaning Landlady isn't able to get out to do her run of an evening (due to babysitting). Therefore, she's thinking about getting a running machine (probably used "off of" eBay).

Now - does anyone know their stuff about running machines? What to look for to ensure quality. Brands? etc.

Any help greatly appreciated.

Cheers,
Phil.
I bought a "cheapie" rebok one online. it may not be particularly advanced but looked nice and on paper did all i needed (i.e. spin the belt). urns out it is nigh on unusable since I am literally at it's max weight spec and it's not a problem because i too heavy for the frame or anything. But when my leading foot lands it carries teh opposite momentum to the belt and the mass behind it means the engine spinnign the belt does not cope therefore i atually stop the belt's motion for a fraction of a second. that in turn means I have to run in an unnatural way and make sure my leading foot lands in a more genteel manner. making proper fast running impossible because if i do that and i am not holding onto the handlebars and I forget myself for a second, i seriously risk falling over byt he brief but sudden stopping of the belt.


keep that in mind and if the landlady is close to the max designed range for the treadmill, get a heavier duty one or you will be wasting your money.
Holding on to the hand-bars while running on a machine will affect your foot-strike as it is not a natural running movement.

HundredthIdiot

4,477 posts

304 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
ninja-lewis said:
Could she take the children with her? There's a group of mums who go jogging in the local park while pushing babies in prams/buggies.
I got beaten in a 5 mile race over Christmas by a bloke pushing a buggy.

anonymous-user

74 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
has she considered a water rower instead?

i only ask because running machines are pretty awful and as others have said, no substitute for the real thing. I would imagine that you lose a vital part of the running action on a treadmill? (the bit where you push forwards) from expereince you will need to spend about £800 to get a useable, solid machine.

a good rower is a more thorough workout and a lot more peaceful!

Parsnip

3,194 posts

208 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
pablo said:
running machines are pretty awful and as others have said, no substitute for the real thing.
This gets thrown around alot, and is quite frankly complete crap - ask any serious runner and they will tell you that treadmills are a necessary evil.

A crap running machine is crap. A good running machine saves you knees and lets you train when it isn't possible to go outside - can fully understand why women won't want to run outside when it is dark. Also, i don't care who you are, but if the choice is between running in the snow or sitting on your arse, 9 times out of ten the TV will be going on - if you have a treadmill, its a non-issue.

Last year I put about 600km in on treadmills with about the same again on the road - had my most successful season ever - would put a lot of it down to the extra distance during winter and the relative lack of injury due to a lot of treadmill running.

parakitaMol.

11,876 posts

271 months

Tuesday 2nd February 2010
quotequote all
Landlord said:
(probably used "off of" eBay).

Phil.
Can't help you

anonymous-user

74 months

Wednesday 3rd February 2010
quotequote all
Parsnip said:
pablo said:
running machines are pretty awful and as others have said, no substitute for the real thing.
This gets thrown around alot, and is quite frankly complete crap - ask any serious runner and they will tell you that treadmills are a necessary evil.

A crap running machine is crap. A good running machine saves you knees and lets you train when it isn't possible to go outside - can fully understand why women won't want to run outside when it is dark. Also, i don't care who you are, but if the choice is between running in the snow or sitting on your arse, 9 times out of ten the TV will be going on - if you have a treadmill, its a non-issue.

Last year I put about 600km in on treadmills with about the same again on the road - had my most successful season ever - would put a lot of it down to the extra distance during winter and the relative lack of injury due to a lot of treadmill running.
i like to think of myself as a semi-serious runner and i am studying applied sports psychology....

yes i was referring to cheap tradmills in the main, and i do agree that they are a necessary evil, but they are mileage gaining tools and nothing more. they do not offer the same sensory experience throughout the body as running on a surface. much like a turbo trainer for cycling, you can use one to train and build up the mileage but you can not tell me its a valid substitute regardless of the software/technology.