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4.4 out of 5 stars

MagneTrainer MagneTrainer-ER Mini Exercise Bike Arm and Leg Exerciser

$107.99
$249 57% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Black
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Top positive review
25 people found this helpful
Feels and operates like institutional quality equipment; definitely 5 stars
By Jeff P. on Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2016
I'm posting this same review for three closely related products: the MagneTrainer-ER Mini Exercise Bike, the Quick-Connect kit for the MagneTrainer, and the Ergonomic Hand Pedals for the MagneTrainer. I bought all three and together they effectively become a single product. Background: I'm a 62 y.o. COPD patient going through a pulmonary rehab course. One of the machines used in the course is an "arm bike" which you use by cranking some handles with your hands/arms using the same motion your feet would make on a bicycle. This makes you push and pull with your arms, shoulders, upper back, etc. I noticed that this felt like an efficient way to work a lot of muscles that I usually don't work in a short period of time, and it can be as tough or as easy as I choose since the resistance is adjustable. How to get that experience at home without spending big bucks on a gym-quality machine the size of a small car? I read lots of reviews and decided to try out the MagneTrainer and I am sold. It has the feel and performance of the pricey equipment you find in hospitals, rehab centers, gyms, etc. The action is silky smooth and consistent throughout the range of motion, regardless of the resistance. It's nearly silent. You don't need to plug it in (it runs off of one AA battery). The machine is heavy and well-balanced enough that I've experienced no wobbling...it feels like it's nailed to the table or floor when used as they tell you to use it. The standard foot pedals are substantial and comfortable and have Velcro straps to keep your feet from slipping off, and they can be used as hand grips. I bought the optional hand grips ("Ergonomic Hand Pedals") because I liked the similar feel of the handles on the equipment in rehab. The hand grips are substantial, durable and so heavy you could fling them at a burglar and knock him cold. Likewise the optional Quick Connects that allow you to swap the foot pedals for the hand pedals are very solid, well machined, industrial quality stuff. Assembly: the process is easy to understand but you need to put some muscle behind the wrenches when putting this together. All the tools needed are included. You can buy the hand pedals and the quick connects later if you're not sure about the machine, just be prepared to go through something of a second installation when you add them. You don't need the hand pedals but if you buy them, you absolutely need the quick-connects as well. Otherwise if you wanted to switch between hand and foot pedals, you'd have to break out a wrench and risk stripping threads and by the time you were done, you'd be so aggravated you wouldn't want to use the thing! I plan to use it mostly for upper body exercise, but decided to just bite the bullet and outfit the thing completely as I expect I'll have this for some time. With the quick connect adapters installed I find it easy to swap the handlebars for the foot pedals and vice versa. I also find it easy to move the MagneTrainer between the table and the floor if I'm switching from hands to feet (it has a handle). My take is that if you'd find those tasks difficult, you most likely have a helper available who could do it for you. I have two nitpicks. Resistance is adjustable from nothing to plenty with the turn of a dial, but when you find a setting you like there's nothing to let you remember that setting. If you and I were sharing the same machine it would be neat to know that I'm working at, e.g., Level 6 and you're working at Level 9. That way if you used it last, I could dial back to my comfort zone of Level 6. No such luck. Resistance is easy to adjust but it's like a garden hose. "Hey, how far did you have it turned on?" "I dunno, about half way or something." Not precise, but not a huge deal to work around. The other nitpick is the electronics module. It does exactly what it needs to do but given the overall quality of the rest of the machine and attachments, it feels a little cheap. No backlight, tiny display, no memory. On the other hand, this device has NO POWER CORD and those fancy items take power. This thing runs off of a single AA battery inside the electronics module. This isn't cheap, but for something that feels this sturdy and durable it's worth it to me.
Top critical review
17 people found this helpful
Get the DeskCycle 2 unless you really need arm exerciser
By Lee on Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2022
I recently purchased a DeskCycle 2 for under my desk and I could not be more pleased. It just works and is so easy to put up miles when you are just working and reading. I wanted a similar pedal exerciser for my home gym, for warm ups. The DeskCycle 2 worked well in my gym in my tests, but the pedal length and resulting stride are a bit confining. It is perfect for under a desk and for versatility, but if you know you will have some space and its NOT going under a desk, you can afford a larger stride. That's why I chose the MagneTrainer with it's 5" pedal length instead of getting another DeskCycle, that has just 3.5". The MagneTrainer is much less stable however, even on my rubber non skid horse mats I have in the gym. It wobbles and, with any resistance, begins skidding around. Since I plan it for warm-ups I don't care too much about using resistance and I have sand bags in the gym I can use to steady it ... BUT the DeskCycle 2 was far more stable in the same environment. I got the optional feet extension for the MagneTrainer but that did not stabilize it a whole lot more. To be clear it is plenty usable, just not the level of ergonomic perfection of the DeskCycle 2. That brings me back to the resistance. While it is sort of "continuous", giving you much more option in setting than other 5 or 8 setting magnetic bikes, you have to turn it several 360's to go from min to max resistance. Worse it has maybe 20-30 micro-settings on the wheel that you click through while turning. The clicking is loud and requires lots and lots of turning and clicking to get where you want it. It's near silent biking, but you'll wake the whole house setting the resistance to where you want it. I don't plan on using it for arms so I also got some cheap replacement pedals just for feet. It appears whatever company makes the DeskCycle and MagneTrainer are not making replacement pedals anymore, in fact their website has many 404 errors on pages so the company may not even be in business. It uses standard 9/16 spindle pedals. You can find exercise bike replacement pedals on Amazon in the $20 range. I'm still happy with my purchase, I wanted a longer stride pedal exercise for my gym warm-ups and I got it. As far as I can tell after looking through many competing products, MagneTrainer has the longest stride in it's class of desk pedal exercisers. This might be a good unit if you have a need like mine, want a little more stride and have the room for it, or you are interested in using it as an arm exerciser. The DeskCycle 2 can be used for arms in a pinch but it isn't really made for that. But for most other cases and especially if you have slippery floors, it may be best to avoid this product unless you are willing to deal with its shortcomings.

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