Bowflex Revolution Home Gym
| Brand: | Bowflex | ||
| Average Rating |
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You are looking at the Bowflex Revolution FT home gym. It is a smooth, versatile, and compact piece of equipment in the Bowflex arsenal. The Revolution is distinguished by the company's SpiraFlex resistance technology, which provides a polished, consistent resistance through the entire range of motion--a principal ingredient in developing lean, strong muscles. The versatility of these lightweight interlocking plates lets you quickly and easily adjust the resistance on the Revolution from 10 to 200 pounds for upper body workouts (which can be upgraded to 280 pounds). The machine duplicates virtually every exercise from your local gym, with Freedom Arms that adjust 170 degrees to work muscles from various angles.
The machine also includes a leg press plate for your lower body, along with a five-position foot harness. All told, the Revolution supports more than 90 exercises, including a comprehensive core and abs workout. Other details include comfortable hand grips and a DVD workout video. The Revolution measures 65 by 38 by 73 inches (L x W x H). more info



Clifford T. Ireland on Sat, 30th Jan 2010 10:02 am
A problem with the weight selection
Rating:3 out of 5 stars
Bowflex Revolution Home Gym
The smallest weight increase is 10 pounds (5 on each side). Many times when you raise the weight, the total change should be much smaller, 1, 2.5, 5 pounds, as is possible with most gym machines. For those of us who want fitness as we grow older, but are unable to build massive weight-lifter bodies, this is a real problem. So, it may be important to consider other possibilities.
Aside from that, this is a good machine.
Belles on Sat, 30th Jan 2010 11:29 am
JUNK…this is a terrible fitness machine
Rating:1 out of 5 stars
First off, you can only increase the weight by 10 lbs! That is the minimum! You can’t go up just 1-2 or 5 lbs! So it is hard to reach your blow out zone because it is either too easy to lift or impossible. And the leg options are horrid! To stand and do your legs with straps, you can buy the cheap $20 rubber things with handles to slam between your door and get better results with more proper form! To do hamstrings I have to contort my body and the nut on the quad press exercise rubs my leg and once again I have to contort my body to avoid rubbing my skin raw. I was SO excited to get this machine and to my dismay the leg workouts are a nightmare! And being a woman, 10 lb increases is impossible on most exercises. Simply disappointing entirely! I’ll take the old bowflex over this junk!
Zephyr on Sat, 30th Jan 2010 6:48 pm
Great machine with 10 years of piece of mind
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I really do enjoy this machine. I prefer it over the older bowflex models with the power rods. The thing that sold me on this was when I tried it out at a sports store I liked the way the resistance felt. It really made my muscles work hard, but yet had a low impact. I don’t know why some people are complaining about this being made of cheap plastic parts, I mean you get a 10 year warrenty on this entire machine. If any of the parts give out your covered. You can’t get that kind of warrenty on most other fitness machines even those that don’t have plastic parts. I think this machine is great and recommend it because of it’s excellent workouts and 10 year piece of mind warrenty.
Joe TI on Sat, 30th Jan 2010 11:16 pm
Don’t buy from THE FITNESS OUTLET
Rating:1 out of 5 stars
I like the Bowflex Revolution a lot.
BEWARE: Nautilus is not honoring the warranty unless the seller is an authorized dealer. I bought this product from “THE FITNESS OUTLET” through Amazon and I’m having trouble getting Nautilus to accept my warranty registration. So far, I have not had any problems with the gym…I just hope I don’t need the warranty.
Thornwell Simons on Sun, 31st Jan 2010 2:58 am
A decent machine, but not a free ticket
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
This review may sound a little negative, but . .well, I’ll explain. I do use this machine pretty regularly and enjoy working out on it. But it ain’t cheap, and it ain’t perfect, either, especially if you’re a complete novice to weightlifting.
Over the years, I’ve worked out in gyms and I’ve worked out at home both with older Bowflex power-rod models and with this one. I’m about the furthest thing there is from a walking mile of muscle, but I try to at least maintain a basic fitness level. Overall, I prefer lifting in a gym with a friend as a spotter, for a lot of reasons — working out with a friend helps educate you about proper lifting technique, the buddy system works as motivator, and many of the most efficient excercises for muscle gain — deadlifts, military press, squats — require either free weights or a dedicated Smith machine, and can’t be performed on this machine.
But if you don’t have any friends to lift with you and there aren’t any gyms nearby, or if (like me) you simply don’t have the time to make it to the gym regularly, you can get a decent workout with a bowflex system. I’ve had this machine for about three years now, and I use it fairly consistently (usually in six month on/ six month off cycles, as I watch my belly fat expand and retract). If you do choose to get a home gym system, this one is a good choice. It does let you fit a lot of exercises into a small space, and it’s great for working out at home safely without a spotter. You can do a lot of basic excercises on it — incline and decline bench; leg presses, extensions, and curls; preacher curl, resisted crunches; chest and shoulder flies; it doubles effectively as a weighted rowing machine. Overall, you can hit pretty much any individual muscle group in the body with this thing.
As to durability and construction, this machine has also stood up reasonably well over time, despite several moves and long periods of daily use; the “power rods” on my old bowflex lost a fair bit of their elasticity over time, but the the resistance plates on this machine are (as far as I can tell) just as tough now as they were when I purchased the thing. You will probably need at least two people to put the thing together (unless you’re fit enough already to make it redundant). You’ll have to do some partial disassembly when moving it through a doorway, too — the horizontal rod on which the plates fit sticks out too much to fit through a standard doorway — but all that takes is ten minutes or so with the included allen wrenches (make sure to keep all the tools it ships with in a bag somewhere, so you can disassemble it later if you need to move). It does creak a little on some exercises, but overall the construction has held up pretty well (so far). [Edit: shortly after I wrote this review, i.e., after using the machine on and off for about three years, one of the plastic parts snapped while I was changing out plates. I contacted the company and was shipped a replacement part within the week, no charge or question].
The main problem with this machine is that it’s hard to hit groups of muscles at once, and that’s the best way to build overall strength. You can’t do squats or deadlifts on it or a number of other compound excercises — they’ve got an isolation excercise for every muscle, but it’s harder to do whole-body workouts on them. (You can *try* to mimic deadlift and press on it, but you end up straining at odd angles that beg for injury). I’ve had to buy a chin-up bar to do pullups, and I generally have to do dips between my kitchen counters. As soon as I get room, I’ll probably need to buy a smith machine, too. The difficulty of doing many compound excercises on this machine leads to a second problem that shows up after you’ve been using this for a few months. If you don’t plan your workout carefully, you can overdevelop your strength in one area and underdevelop another, which can create a risk of injury — to explain, I’ve strained my arms once or twice on this machine because I’d let my bench press get so far out in front of my chest fly that it became difficult to pull the strap handles in to position for the press. So you have to pay attention and plan your excercises carefully, for even muscular development. That’s something you have to do with any workout plan, of course, and in some ways is a problem general to any machine-based excercise program, but you’ll want to pay especial attention to it with the Bowflex machines.
The chief advantage of this “revolution’ model over the more standard “power rod” bowflex model is that the “power rod” basic model has an additional flaw that’s kinda hard to explain — the tension on the rod increases slowly as you do each excercise, so if you pick, say, the two “fifty pound” rods, you’re only getting 100 pounds of resistance at the peak of the curve, and a lot less at the start and finish. The Revolution solves that by using, basically, plastic plates filled with rubber bands, that you twist as you do the motion, providing constant resistance. Of the two, the “revolution” style machine is a lot closer to providing a “weight-like” workout, and the power rod model is a lot closer to total crap (but also a lot cheaper).
Finally, the “resistance plates” have an additional shortcoming: the smallest increment is five pounds per side. A lot of weight training programs (Starting Strength, etc.) try to have you increase resistance in five-pound increments from session to session — so you need 2.5-lb weights to do that (2.5 on each side), and you can’t do that with this machine. Again, you can compensate for it by just working out longer with lighter weights before making the ten-pound jump, but again, it’s something you have to compensate for, and it could end up slowing down your training a bit relative to the rate of gain you’d have with free weights in a gym.
I’d advise going to the gym with a partner first — a knowledgeable friend or a personal trainer — before buying this machine. It’s the best way to learn excercises, learn how to structure your own workout plan, etc. If you don’t know proper form, there’s a fair chance all you’ll do when you get the home gym machine is flail around for a while and try unsuccessfully to ape the guy in the videos, because you won’t know what you’re doing. Because this system lets you do so many different excercises, it’s really easy to do silly or unbalanced workout programs on it, and even easier to do the right excercises in the wrong way (and doing things with improper form can get you injured, which generally derails newbie lifters). You can get this knowledge on your own if you’re willing to put in the research time, but it’s generally more effective to learn with a coach (just like it’s better to learn a martial art from an instructor than from a DVD).
That said, the main thing is just working out consistently, every other day. If having a home gym system in your house (or spending over a grand on an excercise machine) means you’ll work out more consistently, it might be worth getting. If you’re not self-motivated to work out every day, I’d find a partner and go to the gym with him or her every other day instead.
If, on the other hand, despite all the caveats above, you like working out at home instead of in a gym (I do), you can get a decent workout on this machine. There are a lot of benefits to working out at home, too — you don’t have to compete for the machines, you can work out at any time at all, you can work out without having to find a lifting partner for safety, you don’t have to waste time travelling to and from the gym, and so forth.
All in all — if you’re a novice to weightlifting, the best thing you can do is get a friend and go to the gym regularly together. If that isn’t an option for whatever reason, or if you aren’t a novice and/or know you would just prefer to work out at home, period; and if you’re strongly self-motivated to work out regularly; then you can get a very good workout on this machine. You’ll only get out what you put in, but if you have the dedication to consistently push yourself, you can get decent results with this thing.
Porfie Medina on Mon, 1st Feb 2010 11:39 am
The Bowflex Revolution is truly a great Home Gym with plenty of versatility
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I have never been in to the Bowflex infomercials, but I was fascinated by the new technology behind this Bowflex model. I researched this Bowflex Revolution on the internet and found mostly positive reviews. This item was one of Mens Health Top 100 Products of 2005, and these guys are the experts when it comes to Mens fitness. Popular Mechanics says “We don’t normally endorse anything sold via infomercials, but testing is believing and the Bowflex Revolution is the first Bowflex we’ve tried that lives up to its own hype.” Even football legend Brett Favre believes in this product enough to endorse it. I do not work for Bowflex, but I do believe in this product enough after using it and seeing results. I can truly say is this is an amazing machine. After one heck of a nightmare with other machines the Bowflex Revolution has finally met my fitness goals. I have had the Revolution since August 2006 and am very familiar with it and I love it. I loved my bench and free weights, but you usually need a spotter to max out otherwise you risk hurting yourself. After my free weights I went to the Crossbow and the Crossbow Platinum from weider. I had my original crossbow about 1 year and I hated the inconsistent feel of the bows (just like the regular Bowflex models) compared to free weights. I eventually upgraded to the Crossbow Platinum with the built in personal trainer. That machine was ok and worked for about 2 years before the electronics console completely stopped working and my machine would not calibrate properly. After having 2 cheap machines I ended up going with the Bowflex Revolution. I am about 5’10″ and this machine works great. It is a little strange at first, but after a week or so you get the hang of it. The workouts are harder because you truly are getting an even constant resistance both positive and negative making exercises that may have been easier on other machines or free weights feel much harder on the revolution. This machine makes you use all those extra muscles that you would not ordinarily use. The machine has over 100 exercises with 400 variations, along with a CD-ROM personal trainer and DVD that shows you how to properly use this machine and perform each exercise. This is an expensive machine, but after my experience with two cheap machines the Bowflex Revolution is well worth it. The 10 year warranty and the results I have seen are just an added bonus. For people who are independent and do not always have time to go to a gym this is well worth the monthly payment which is comparable to a GYM membership in itself. The customer service from Bowflex is top notch compared to the rude customer service I got from Icon regarding the Weider Crossbows. I truly believe you get what you pay for and I can truly say this is one great well built machine and one of the best investments I have made toward my health. The only negative thing I can say about this machine is the high price tag, but other than that this is a great machine that is built to last.
J. Porter on Mon, 1st Feb 2010 5:15 pm
Poorly made, cheap plastics.
Rating:1 out of 5 stars
I purchased this machine five weeks ago, received it three weeks ago, and have yet to be able to assemble and use the home gym. Upon receiving the product, and unpacking the many boxes that it came in, several items were broken and screws were missing. The metal part of the machine appears to be strong and ruggedly built but the plastics are cheap. One of the main pre-tensioned 5 lb weights, critical to assembling the machine, was broken due to it being made of cheap plastic. Another 40 lb plastic weight had its middle section pushed in and was useless. Customer service has been fair to deal with but slow in responding to e-mails. Due to a lack of any part number listing in the instructions, wrong replacement parts have been shipped and I’ve yet to be able to assemble and use the machine. I’m not happy with the quality of this item which costs nearly 3000 dollars!
Mark H on Mon, 1st Feb 2010 5:33 pm
Great home gym
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
Gives a great workout, and relatively compact compared to any other home gym (talking about the full Revolution, not the condensed XP). It takes a little getting used to the positions (just a couple sets) but is a little more natural if you are a prior gym rat that has worked with cables before. The only downside (which is kind of a big one) is that I’m 5’11 and I don’t really get a good full range of motion on some exercises, such as the leg press, I’m only getting good tension through about half of the repitition. The spiraflex plates seem to work pretty well though, and the equipment is rather sturdy. (Heavy too).
J. Normandie on Tue, 2nd Feb 2010 12:00 pm
a great work out…surprisingly
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
I have never been a home machine fan maybe because I was into free weights many years ago. But after finishing my basement and at the urging of my wife we decided to make a gym area. The room is 10 feet by 16 feet by 7 feet 6 inches high. You will need about that size to be comfortable , 9 by 12 feet could work. Depends how much room you want to walk around. I initially was looking at a different machine but ran across this by chance, used but in perfect condition. It was already assembled in a basement. I just had to disconnect 4 bolts and away I went. The couple I bought it from said it was time consuming putting it together but they got through it. They also told me if you decided to return it ,everything had to go back perfectly in the box , which they said would be difficult! Plus you have to pay about $300 to return. So I would check on that. This is a very good machine. It does everything you want it to do and than some. You can go to youtube and look it up. I’m not saying that the new generation of other equipment out there isnt as good. Some are. All I’m saying is if this is the machine you are thinking of getting and you don’t mind the price tag and you have the room for it, get it. sure its a pain to put together. Hire someone, if you can afford this machine than you can spend $150 more for peace of mind. By the way the plates take a little time to get used to putting on and taking off. Also my wife has never worked out before and she goes to the room by herself and does it all. So far so good. the only problem for me is the range of motion on maybe one exercise , but they show you different ways to hit that muscle group. This thing looks inferior built when you see it but it is not. Its not made the same way as a traditional machine that has to pull heavy weights up and down. it has thick rubber bands in hard plastic plates. Anyways …I’ve had it two years and love it. Just use it and you’ll love it too.
ems on Wed, 3rd Feb 2010 1:34 am
Very good.
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
This equipment is not cheap, but let me tell you it is excellent!!
I had a traditional equipment and this one works much better.I also have the dumbbells and the stand
I am 56, in the best shape of my life, with only 17% body fat.
Eric Gardner on Wed, 3rd Feb 2010 10:08 am
Great Home Workout
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I recently bought this product. I have trained and worked out for over 30 years. I have competed in body building in the past also. My current schedule left me unable to make it to a gym with the frequency that I like so I started my search for a good home gym product that could give me a complete workout. I researched for over 2 months before deciding to part with the money for this system. It is very heavy and once emplaced it is best to leave it where you set it up. As to working out it has amazing resistance and feel. I like to train the negative side of the muscle with contractions while lowering the weight and this machine gives a great smooth movement. It takes some getting used to and of course it is not as good as some of the specialized machines in the gym. Bottom line, this is an excellent choice to get a work out from home with no waiting for equipment to come available.