Excellent quality, if you want pounds, not kilos
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| Review Date: December 11, 2008 |
| Reviewer: New England Yankee, Northern New England |
I just spent an hour going through the stock of a local fitness company. The Body Solid kettlebells are really well-finished - not quite as smooth as the picture makes it out to be, but close (!) and quite a bit smoother and better finished than the GoFit, Cap, Troy, Apollo, and Powermax bells I looked at recently. I found several that I could buy and never bother to touch up the handles, in fact. They're almost as smooth as most epoxy coated kettlebells.
The handles graduate in size somewhat, but are roughly 1 3/8" or 35 mm through most of the range (appx. 20 - 50 pounds), and a bit smaller below that and a bit larger above. Space inside the handle is a bit under 3", but measurements were hard to get very accurately with a tape measure. Suffice it to say that handle diameters are sufficiently beefy, and space is certainly mainline.
The paint on all the examples I saw, except one oddball, was shiny black. Body Solid describes it as enamel, though the dealer insisted it was powder coat. It scratches white, and some on the rack showed some scratches like this. I actually preferred the matte finish on the oddball, but the dealer insisted that all new ones are the shiny black.
I like them, and they're well-priced. The only problem - for me - is that I prefer kettlebells in conventional kilo weights, as virtually every book, video, training regime, article, etc. that you read on kettlebells uses kilos (standards weights start with 4kg and go up in 4kg increments). Pound weight is a non-issue for the 35 pounder, as it's only 3 ounces different than a 16 kilo bell. The 55 pounder, however is 2.2 pounds heavier than a 24. Body Solid doesn't make bells above 75 pounds. All competition bells, should you develop that interest, are in standard kilogram weight progressions as well.
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good product(s)
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| Review Date: December 21, 2009 |
| Reviewer: Robert Wilkinson, |
| I bought two fifteen pounders to start with and these particular bells are well built with good gripping handles! I will be upgrading to the twenty pounders sooner than later. |
5 pounders are a scarce commodity
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| Review Date: May 9, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Louise Corley, Dallas, TX USA |
| I am a personal trainer that specializes in "boomers and seniors." The 10 lb kettle bells are too difficult for many women this age to handle. They become discouraged and quit. The 5 lb. kettlebell is perfect to ease the women into this strength-building program. 5 lbs kettlebells are scarce as hens teeth but are a valuable asset to getting clients interested in continuing the program. |
its a kettlebell
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| Review Date: December 3, 2009 |
| Reviewer: Thomas Leon Simpson, Anderson, SC, US |
Its a kettlebell, very nice and lot cheaper in price than the rkc kettlebells, shinier and has nice smooth finish, would buy again, but I dont need another Kb at this moment, I have this one and the 35 pound rkc Kb.
Tommy |
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