Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack-150
Sarah, You have some very nice equipment. Is this at home? How frequently and for how long do you work out? I've always wanted to try out one of those crossbows. Looks pretty cool on TV. Do you find it useful and satisfying? Have you used free weights or conventional resistance machines in the past to compare it with them? Sorry so many questions!
Good luck on that goal I'm pulling for you!
Thanks for the well wishes on the goal, kind sir

-- I absolutely will do it; there's not a doubt in my mind!

Now, whether I do it as
quickly as I'd like will remain to be seen!
Yes, I'm both happy and grateful to report that the equipment is in my very own home. I had been doing cardio 3-4 times a week, but have just recently incorporated weight training, so now I'm on a 3 days weights/3 days cardio routine. The weights take me 45-55 minutes (because I'm still setting my initial lift weights with each new daily routine -- then I should be down to 40.) The cardio is usually 20 minutes HIIT (so I'm completely spent) but sometimes I'll do some additional LSD (long slow distance) biking, just to kill some calories without the metabolic boost. (Like a 5 on the exertion scale.)
The Cross Bow that you've seen on TV is undoubtedly the Platinum model; mine is the Advantage, which is the basic model -- still very good, but fewer bells and whistles. I love it, and don't mind at all that it's not digital (so I have to manually change the bows.) I didn't really have much to compare it to prior to using it, as I had only tried out a couple of Nautilus machines years ago, but I did an enormous amount of research on it prior to ordering it. There are some message boards and fitness sites which provided a huge amount of user comparison info -- and I combed through literally thousands of user comments and reviews from people who had plenty of weight training exp. and basis for comparison. The bottom line: it's a good machine with a good warranty and good quality. It's great for upper body and ab workouts, and ok for lower. (I haven't tried the rowing machine yet for cardio, so I can't yet report on that.) You can do 65+ exercises on it, work up a good sweat, and the resistance is smooth and most of us consider it pretty consistent, although not all agree. You also have to use your stabilizer muscles as you do with free weights, and you can lift heavy without a spotter, so those are some other important features. The body builders say that you can get a good pump on it, but apparently it's not quite as effective for building mass as free weights. I'd imagine that it would be terrific to have as a home machine to augment your brute gym training. I could go on and on, but if you're interested in it (mine was $599 including shipping, and I'll make zero interest $35 monthly payments till it's paid off and I had it within 2 weeks of order) I'd check out a message board at Yahoo Groups called Weider Cross Bow.....there's a wealth of info plus lotsa links to other great resources.
My resistance routine is with a combination of the CB and free weights; I use the dumbbells for squats (although I could use the CB for them) and lunges and deadlifts and a couple more exercises; the rest I do on the CB. I'd highly recommend it for the price. It's a great machine and I have no complaints. (And neither do some experienced weightlifters and licensed personal trainers that I talk to on that message board at Yahoo.)
I needed a machine that wouldn't take over my basement, that allowed for a safe, effective, full body workout, and didn't cost an arm and a leg. I would comfortably recommend it.
Sorry this was so long -- I had lots to say, apparently!
