2010年5月4日星期二

Can Help You Find the Best commercial treadmill suitable for you?


Trotter Treadmill manual by asobek2000


When you are looking for a treadmill for your home, you want to get one that is going to work well for you. Many people feel that the warranty alone is worth purchasing this treadmill. One of the most important factors in using a treadmill to increase your fitness level is the variety of your workouts. exercise treadmillMy brother-in-law was almost 350 pounds 3 months ago and the Sole F83 didn't have any issue carrying his weight at higher speed. Each are twenty minutes long, include a warm up and cool down period, and are equally effective for runners or walkers.The second most important feature is the belt. treadmillMost home machines can be folded and stored away with minimal effort. Granted it doesn't exactly mimic an out door run but it works great when you just can't get out.As you can see, the price rises with the higher level of quality and durability that is built into each of these machines and that is to be expected. However, there are a large number of treadmills on the market. And since it's still selling really well, more and more companies have begun manufacturing them. There are a lot of choices out there and it can be difficult to filter through all of them and choose one.




What a wacky challenge -- balancing quarters. It looked so easy but those people were in pain in no time. Michael emerged victorious, with $2,000 to show for it, and so did Sunshine, for coming in second. That was followed by a frantic win to take home two brand-new Mazdas: Contestants had to run up a muddy hill, in the rain, to fetch keys tied to a balloon. If the key fit the ignition, they won the car. All I kept thinking was, man, that driver's seat is all sweaty and wet and the floord boards must be muddy. Hopefully they got it detailed. Andrea, who apparently drives a junker, won it. Sunshine was dying to win the other, but instead her dad won it and, no surprise, promptly gave it to his beloved daughter. These two are just such a sweet pair.


Many of the contestants are starting to show the wear and tear of the season -- but also have the finish line in their sights and are responding accordingly.


Daris is focusing on keeping his stress level in check, lest it show up on the scale. And poor little Miss Vicky is making up for lost time at the ranch, and doing so under the watchful glare of Jillian, who once again worked her magic. On one day, Vicky had trouble making it through a five interval workout, insisting that it was too hard, she wasn't ready, blah blah blah. So, the following day, what does Jillian have her do? Run the same set the following day....alongside all of the competitors who can run. The math: 35 intervals total. It was punishment for not following Jillian -- but, more importantly, Jillian's attempt to get her to go beyond her limits. Mission accomplished.


Still to be figured out: Why, exactly, did Vicky end up at 300+ pounds. One thing that is causing pain: Her belief that her parents deserve a prettier daughter. I was reaching for the Kleenex at that one.


A mud fight later ensued, with the players literally dragging Bob through the mud, and he was a good sport about it. Then, he turned the crowd on Jillian. Admit it: Seeing that look on Jillian's face as she realized she couldn't turn the masses back and began running for her life was priceless. (We rewatched that door-slamming scene, and it got funnier each time.)


Of course, the final laugh went to Jillian during the last-chance workout, which is always brutal. But "This time, it's personal.... I beat them until I literally thought their brains were going to pour out of their ears and their noses."


In another example of pushing through the pain and personal limitations: Michael jogged a mile, a personal first. Great, Bob said, "now do it again." But Michael figured he couldn't just stop at two, right? So he made it a 5K. And then, since he was already on the darned treadmill, he just made it an honest five miles jogged. So he went from never jogging a mile in his life to jogging five. Unbelievable. Now, Michael just looks like a heavy dude -- no sign of that incredibly obese Michael who first showed up at the ranch.


Bob told Michael that he will be in the final four "if it kills us both."


It was a tough week on the scale. The numbers weren't much to write home about, except for a pigtailed Michael, who lost nine pounds. The low numbers sent Andrea and Sam -- who lost zero pounds -- below the yellow line. It was Andrea's time to go home. She looks great at home, is teaching cycling classes, and it was so nice to see her jogging with her dog, who was underexercised due to Andrea's weight. (Was it me, or did you also hear that dog say "Yippie! I'm running with my mom!")


--Rene Lynch
Join me on Twitter @renelynch



For the next three weeks, I am traveling in China, reporting on a few larger themes, but also posting occasional dispatches when people or places that I encounter illuminate trends in the news, or how history is experienced on a personal level.



Within Beijing's upscale SoHo district -- a residential and shopping area aspiring to the chic status of its New York namesake -- sits a four-story mega-Starbucks. A dramatic winding staircase connects its four levels; the free magazine stand by the counter stocks Esquire's China edition. The tables are crowded with well-heeled laptop-users in their 20s and 30s, often working alone (not the usual work mode in China), as well small groups pouring over Powerpoint slides and spreadsheets. The coffee shop is a favorite haunt for young Beijing professionals.



The walls of the flagship Starbucks are all glass, affording a view out on a complex of identical apartment buildings with distinctive white frames and a string of upscale stores and restaurants on the ground level. Across the sidewalk is Bally Total Fitness Beijing.



As in New York, the people who come here are very interested in real estate. They have been drawn to this spot, from across the heartland of a vast country, by a mix of opportunity, wanderlust, and ambition. China's East Coast professionals tend to see Beijing and Shanghai the way the French see Paris; there is Paris, and then there is everything else.



But it is becoming harder and harder for new arrivals to get a foothold in the housing market. On Wednesday, the government announced that property values across China had risen faster last month than any time in the past five years. The surge is particularly acute in Beijing. "Beijing's housing market is really a nationwide housing market," China analyst Bill Bishop observes. "Every person with means in China wants to buy in Beijing. Beijing is the center of power, it has the best education system in the country and it has the best health system."



China's soaring home prices have lately provoked speculation as to whether we're seeing another real estate bubble on the verge of bursting. Top hedge fund manager Jim Chanos recently told "The Charlie Rose Show" that China's property market is "on a treadmill to hell" that he expects to "run its course" later this year, or early next. Much of the recent price hike has been triggered by speculators snatching up new apartments, often leaving them vacant, with an eye to sell later at substantial margins. With an immature stock market and few reliable long-term investment opportunities in China, real estate is overstressed as one of the few investment games in town.



Meanwhile, current home prices make young Chinese professionals worry whether there will be a place for them. Chen "Aggie," a young woman with a job in marketing sipping coffee at the SoHo Starbucks, said that the prices of several condos she had visited last fall had already risen 150 percent. Wearing a trendy tight white shirt and jeans, she nursed her mug of coffee Americano. Chen says doesn't feel she has the savings and job security to purchase now, but also worries that if she doesn't, she'll lose her chance forever. Her expectations are fairly modest - a one bedroom flat, with a small kitchen would be fine - yet owning her own place "would make me settle down" and feel more secure. Among her peers, home ownership is part of the new Chinese dream. Last fall 80 percent of respondents to a China Youth Daily online poll said that home ownership was necessary for happiness.



For now, though, that dream seems out of reach. Even renting in Beijing is a stretch. The old benchmark, that young professionals should contribute one-quarter of their salaries toward housing, now seems unrealistic. Chen says she takes advantage of a new government-sponsored plan by which her employer contributes 12.5 percent of her salary to her rental expenses. The same allowance could also be directed toward a mortgage. "In some ways, it has become easier," she says, "to get money from the government since the financial troubles in 2008."



Chen is not originally from Beijing, but from a small village in the western province of Guizhou. Her parents were shopkeepers. She came to Beijing seven years ago for college, and has since made the great leap forward so many families in China hope for their children: moving from blue-collar to a white-collar job. The fact that she has been able to do so is testament to a certain meritocratic strand of modern Chinese culture.



But real estate is where the dream of upward mobility scrapes against hard reality. One of China's most popular TV shows - until it was recently banned- was called "Wo Ju," roughly translated as both "Snail House" and "Narrow Dwelling." The series followed the travails of a young professional couple struggling to buy an apartment in a city resembling Shanghai. As the lead character Hai Ping described his situation: "Every morning when I wake up, a bunch of numbers bounce in front of my eyes: 6,000 yuan for housing loans, 2,500 yuan for daily necessities, 600 yuan for social activities, 500 yuan for transportation fees and 400 yuan for property fees." The show sparked heated debate within China. Chinese writer Xiao Fuxing, for instance, has labeled the equation of home ownership with happiness as a "thorn" in Chinese society. The fact that "Wo Ju" was later banned is testament to how deeply it touched a nerve with China's aspiring classes.



Home ownership in China is not as meritocratic as it seems. Most of Chen's friends who were able to purchase homes had received most of the down-payment money from their parents (a popular joke here is that ambitious mothers-in-law in China are the chief drivers of rising property values). But as Chen's parents are poor, she has no help. Unlike in the United States, where down payments were often small, at least before the financial crash, in China the down payment may exceed that of the mortgage value - requiring a lot of cash up front. This favors speculators and old money. "I had many dreams when I first came to Beijing," Chen says, tucking a strand of long hair behind one ear. "I work hard, but I think, for me, this hope is an illusion."



She and a friend from her province have lately begun to discuss what they might do for work if they return home.








Are you determined to stay with your weight loss program, but you need to travel a lot? All treadmills have programs for all individuals no matter what there fitness goals are. It's not something that many people are taking lightly either because they are moving forward so well on a nice treadmill. You can get a full 15% incline, allowing you to train well no matter what the weather is like outside. It also features a wide range of upgrades over the traditional treadmill like a powerful 3.0 HP motor, a good set of large rollers, a cushion flex running surface and presets that will make any workout you choose fun and challenging. folding treadmillThe treadmill is built according to the demand and specification of health clubs and gyms. When looking for a higher end 'commercial grade' treadmill for your home gym, consider a 'lighter' version of a commercial treadmill model or a home fitness equipment brand that is known for higher end machines. First of all, the frame of a commercial treadmill is made of a high alloy steel or aluminum, and is welded, as opposed to put together with nuts and bolts, like consumer grade equipment. As more and more people developed the habit of doing regular exercise, the popularity of commercial treadmills has also increased.

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