How to Avoid “Junk” Fitness Products and Get Good Value for Your Money
May 3rd, 2011
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by Richard · Filed Under: Anti-aging products · Anti-aging strategies · Senior Exercise and Fitness
There are a lot of great options for people who want to build their fitness. Unfortunately, there are also a lot of products offered for sale that are basically useless. This article is a quick primer on how to identify “junk” fitness products.
First of all, a product that promises “great results in only five minutes three times a week” should be looked at with great skepticism. There are some five minute training drills that only a handful of supremely conditioned athletes can do. For example, the the RKC kettlebell test involves snatching a 53 pound kettlebell overhead 100 times in five minutes. Vanishingly few people have the strength and endurance to do this. For the vast majority of people just starting training, you will get little value from “five minute” training. Beginners simply do not have the physical capacity to do the high intensity workouts that will tax even the best conditioned athletes.
On the flip side of this point, five minutes of training is better than nothing…..but not a lot. You should expect to spend 30 minutes (minimum) and 60 minutes (maximum) in a training session that will produce strength development and improved cardiovascular capacity.
A second indicator of a “junk” product is that it can only be used for one exercise. Most of us have seen “infomercials” for abdominal machines that put you through the same movement with different degrees of difficulty. The main problem with these devices is that most people quickly outgrow them. When this happens, the “one trick” device winds up in the garage, or at a yard sale.
In direct contrast to the “one trick” devices are things like kettlebells or dumbbells that can be used in an almost infinite variety of movements. Even light weights can be used in a wide variety of training that will continue to give the user a challenge for many years. Free weights are the polar opposite of “one trick” devices. There are a vast number of ways you can use them for many years….and they are simple and don’t suffer mechanical failures.
A third way to evaluate a potential purchase is whether the device will actually do what you need done. If you are beginning a fitness program, you need something that will give your entire body a good training session. As noted, many of the devices offered for sale will work one part of your body, and leave the other parts untested. This can actually be a problem in that you will develop muscle imbalances, and the pains that go with them.
There are very few machines on the market that will give you a good all around training session. The ones that can do this are extremely expensive. Free weights (barbells, dumbbells, kettlebells) are clearly superior to almost any machine in terms of versatility and giving good value for the dollar. Another option that is growing in popularity are exercise sandbags. Like free weights, sandbags allow you to do a huge variety of movements and train the entire body.
Finally, you have to evaluate what benefit you will get from the fitness “gadget” as opposed to the value of paying a monthly membership at a gym. The gym will give you a huge range of equipment and other training options. For example, if you have to pay $100 for a product, you should consider what you would get if you spent the same $100 on a gym membership. You might get up to three months of access to lots of different equipment in the gym. You might even find that the product you considered buying was available at the gym for you to try out.
Lastly, you might be initially attracted to a piece of equipment because it promised some type of result you wanted. If you take the time to think how best to accomplish your goals, you may decide that a totally different strategy is better suited to accomplish the goals you want to attain. In the end, you may decide to buy something totally different.
I hope this helps you make good choices when considering how to invest your time and money in fitness equipment. Here’s hoping that you are able to get great value for your money.
Richard


