Vintage exercise equipment experiences

Vintage exercise equipment experiences

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Bluevanman

Original Poster:

8,495 posts

208 months

Sunday 12th January
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If you're as old as me you may have used equipment that is no longer around or certainly not mainstream.
I remember buying a keep fit set from Woolworths in the late 70's,it compromised of a chest expander,a spring bar thing that you had to bend and a pair of grip exercisers which were like crocodile clips .
I then moved on to a Bullworker purchased from a newspaper ad.
Next up came hollow plastic weights that I filled with sand.
Needless to say I didn't turn into Charles Atlas.....and yes I bought his exercise program too biggrin

Anyone else ?

Jamescrs

5,326 posts

80 months

Sunday 12th January
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I suspect I’m a bit younger than you OP but I do remember my dad buying the Bullworker which came with a colour exercise guide showing the exercises to do with it. I did try using it when I was somewhere around 10-12.

I recall having in the garage a York weight lifting bench with a bar and some plate weights which were plastic and likely sand filled along with a couple of dumbbell bars.

I guess although I didn’t have a clue what I was doing at the time in hindsight it did spur me on and now I’m in my 40s I’m a regular gym goer.

Huzzah

28,056 posts

198 months

Sunday 12th January
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Do you remember the wheel thing too?


ETA all this stuff is still available.

Edited by Huzzah on Sunday 12th January 18:47

Blue_star

112 posts

31 months

Sunday 12th January
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Evening,

Not sure about home equipment but looks like gym machines gave massively gone downhill.

Convenience and design are sleeker but functionality is a lot lower.

I would love a gym where you have machines allowing just eccentric movement or have belts….


Bluevanman

Original Poster:

8,495 posts

208 months

Sunday 12th January
quotequote all
Huzzah said:
Do you remember the wheel thing too?


ETA all this stuff is still available.

Edited by Huzzah on Sunday 12th January 18:47
What wheel thing ?

I just thought of something else I bought,a Weider flex bench,used rubber bands for resistance instead of weights.



Huzzah

28,056 posts

198 months

Sunday 12th January
quotequote all
Bluevanman said:
Huzzah said:
Do you remember the wheel thing too?


ETA all this stuff is still available.

Edited by Huzzah on Sunday 12th January 18:47
What wheel thing ?

I just thought of something else I bought,a Weider flex bench,used rubber bands for resistance instead of weights.



AlexC1981

5,294 posts

232 months

Sunday 12th January
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Remember when everyone was talking about the Shake Weight a few years ago biggrin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWtcE52LKgk

Bluevanman

Original Poster:

8,495 posts

208 months

Sunday 12th January
quotequote all
AlexC1981 said:
Remember when everyone was talking about the Shake Weight a few years ago biggrin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWtcE52LKgk
Never seen that before, I thought it was a spoof commercial but no, it's an actual thing lol

popeyewhite

23,007 posts

135 months

Sunday 12th January
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The "wheel thing" is an abwheel and still used a great deal today. Advanced exercise though.

Xerstead

714 posts

193 months

Monday 13th January
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Blue_star said:
Evening,

Not sure about home equipment but looks like gym machines gave massively gone downhill.

Convenience and design are sleeker but functionality is a lot lower.

I would love a gym where you have machines allowing just eccentric movement or have belts….
A previous gym I went to (~20 years ago) had pneumatic resistance machines. Adjustable air pressure for resistance instead of metal plates and gravity. It felt like something was missing from the spirit of a gym.
Where I am now has a load of plate loaded machines including one for belt squats you clip a belt onto. Can also clip onto the other adjustable cables if you want to.
Not sure what you mean by 'allowing just eccentric movements' you need the concentric to get back to the starting point for the second rep.

I had had the springy hand grippers. Almost useless as a healthy bloke. But I did get an upgraded set from Captains of Crush. Their 'Trainer', and 'Level 1', grippers take a lot more force to close (100lb and 140lb) with stronger versions available. They still get some uae when I remember.
I may still have one of those ab roller wheels in the back of a wardrobe. Tried a couple of times and forgotten.

I also have a CoolBoard balance board stashed away from years ago. Its a board like a large skateboard to balance on a ball. It was pretty good for balance and gave my feet and ankles a good workout trying to not fall off it smile unfortunately the inflatable balls it came with soon deformed and deflated. I've just googled it again and they now have solid rubber balls to ride on so I may buy myself a replacement.

Hoofy

78,549 posts

297 months

Monday 13th January
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I inherited my dad's old "bullworker". As a teen, I remember my dad being able to squeeze the two ends towards each other but I could never move the damned things. Now that I've done the gym thing for a few years, it's nice to be able to shorten the rusting lump.

I decided to pause bench presses and push ups for a month to see what effect this bullworker would have and it certainly gave me a chest pump. What I didn't like was the pressure it exerts on the elbows - it felt like I was always one step away from golfer's elbow using it, so I stopped using it.

It's quite heavy so I sometimes use it for lightish clubbell exercises if I fancy loosening up the shoulders.

Dunno the name but another piece of kit I inherited is some device that is about 120cm long with handles at one end, two springs, resting it vertically on the ground, you push the handles downwards to work the abs. You can also use it to work the legs and do stuff like chest work, compressing it similar to the bullworker. It's not difficult to compress the springs but it's just awkward to use because the action is jerky so standard dumbells are a preferred choice. I suppose I could oil the springs but the springs are pretty oily/mucky already, easily attract dust and I don't want them even more sticky.

Ultimately, nothing beats cast iron.

Oh, I started using my powerball again just for fun while waiting for videos to render. Christ, you get forearm pump from it if you hit it hard!

ChevronB19

7,812 posts

178 months

Monday 13th January
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Bullworkers were renowned for breaking people’s jaws, and never use them if you are particularly hirsute in the chest area!

Hoofy

78,549 posts

297 months

Monday 13th January
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ChevronB19 said:
Bullworkers were renowned for breaking people’s jaws, and never use them if you are particularly hirsute in the chest area!
Haha, isn't that because people do the easy option which is pulling them like archery training rather than pressing them?

bing

1,936 posts

253 months

Tuesday 14th January
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Visit body worx gym peterborough

Portofino

4,751 posts

206 months

Tuesday 14th January
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That shake weight thing ha ha!

Bluevanman

Original Poster:

8,495 posts

208 months

Saturday 25th January
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This just popped up on marketplace, I remember seeing these for sale, can't imagine they were much good

HTP99

24,059 posts

155 months

Saturday 25th January
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I remember my mum, or my dad, probably my mum had one of these weird contraptions, I did set it up a few times to use myself when in my teens, not sure a) what it was supposed to actually do and b) if it actually did what it was supposed to do:


Hoofy

78,549 posts

297 months

Sunday 26th January
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Bluevanman said:
This just popped up on marketplace, I remember seeing these for sale, can't imagine they were much good
Good for training if you're a gardener and have to manage a massive hedgerow?

AlexC1981

5,294 posts

232 months

Sunday 26th January
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My grandfather had a pair of Indian clubs, similar to these:


Hoofy

78,549 posts

297 months

Sunday 26th January
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AlexC1981 said:
My grandfather had a pair of Indian clubs, similar to these:

They might be useful still - depends on the weight, I guess.