Sportsroyals via Amazon has
Sportsroyals Power Cage with Lat Pulldown (76901) for
$309.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to community member
hkgonra for finding this deal
Available Colors:
Features:
- Sportsroyals power cages are made of 50 X 50mm commercial steel square frame with a thickness of 1.5mm and are safe to support 1200 lbs. The power rack weighs 150lbs with 2 reinforcing tabs which increase its stability during training.
- Sportsroyals home gym rack equipped with an upper and lower pull-down pulley system. Precision bearing pulleys and fully electroplated telescopic poles provide a smooth movement experience. Solid steel pulley rope can hold up to 500 pounds, convenient for you to do any weight workout.
- Cage Dimensions: 61.6"L×56.0"W×82.6"H
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Top Comments
I wish it was taller so I could do push press inside the rack, and pull-ups without having to bend my legs.
I wish there was more thought put in to the weight holders, as the weight storage bars prevent me from being able to bench press while inside the rack due to my weight plates preventing me from racking the bar, something which almost made me return it at first. But I've worked around that by switching to incline press and using the long safety rod to hold the bar and using the safety frames just in case.
I wish the entire rack was deeper. I'm used to a much deeper rack and being able to take a full step or two back when back squatting, but with this rack I'm limited to one step. I prefer to have a deeper rack so there's room in front of me and enough room behind me to bail and dump the bar. Not a huge deal, it just took some getting used to. I just have to squat a bit closer to the J hooks than I'm used to.
The rack wobbles a little when doing pull-ups. I've switched to a slow strict pull-up so it's perfectly fine, there's no danger but it makes a little noise while doing it. I don't think this rack would be safe for Crossfit moves like kipping pull-ups or toes to bar.
Little things like the J hooks and the safety bars leave tiny bits of rubber in my bar due to the knurling. Completely minor, but a little annoying.
The storage hooks are nice, but I always have to remove the rope implement due to my weight plates hitting it while back squatting. And I'm under 6ft.
The bar storage tube is too close to the bottom weight plate holder so it's not easy to get plates on and off the holder on that side, so I leave majority of my weights leaning against the wall. So for me the weight plate holders are mostly unused.
Lat pulldown bar is super lightweight and I'm not 100% sure how much weight it can handle. The welding looks suspect, but maybe it's totally fine. Overall I don't use it much, mostly because I have other exercises I prefer to do.
Solid rack for $310 considering the lat pulldown and all accessories included. I assembled it myself in a few hours. It took me a little longer due to assembling the sides incorrectly so I had to undo it and restart. Definitely pay attention to the orientation of the sides since they only go on one way due to the resistance band pegs. Also, don't over tighten the bolts. I managed to start bending the frame by over tightening.
These racks are all made in China and all ship from the same Southern California warehouses, so it's just down to whether you want Amazon's customer service and to pay that premium.
FWIW, I ultimately decided to buy the Mikolo K3 power cage from Temu, which I got for around $310 after using a $120 off $400 coupon (it's usually on Amazon for around $600). (I had never bought off Temu before, so I was fairly skeptical, but they have been fine and after sales support was good when I ran into an issue.)
OP's Sportsroyals rack on Temu:
https://www.temu.com/------univer...26911.
Mikolo K3 rack on Temu:
https://www.temu.com/--1500-lb---...17450.html
K3 direct from Mikolo:
https://gym-mikolo.com/products/m...ym-fitness
53 Comments
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I ended up buying this, and it's very sturdy: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N6NOXX4/
Do not buy those cheap wobbly pull up stations, either get a cage like OP's, or buy a quality bar like above.
I ended up buying this, and it's very sturdy: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N6NOXX4/
Do not buy those cheap wobbly pull up stations, either get a cage like OP's, or buy a quality bar like above.
I am hoping this will carry me through the starting strength program. I'd like to get up to 350-400 squat.
I am hoping this will carry me through the starting strength program. I'd like to get up to 350-400 squat.
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The pulley weight swapping seems like it'd be annoying tho.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Pmkool1
- I wish it was taller so I could do push press inside the rack, and pull-ups without having to bend my legs.
- I wish there was more thought put in to the weight holders, as the weight storage bars prevent me from being able to bench press while inside the rack due to my weight plates preventing me from racking the bar, something which almost made me return it at first. But I've worked around that by switching to incline press and using the long safety rod to hold the bar and using the safety frames just in case.
- I wish the entire rack was deeper. I'm used to a much deeper rack and being able to take a full step or two back when back squatting, but with this rack I'm limited to one step. I prefer to have a deeper rack so there's room in front of me and enough room behind me to bail and dump the bar. Not a huge deal, it just took some getting used to. I just have to squat a bit closer to the J hooks than I'm used to.
- The rack wobbles a little when doing pull-ups. I've switched to a slow strict pull-up so it's perfectly fine, there's no danger but it makes a little noise while doing it. I don't think this rack would be safe for Crossfit moves like kipping pull-ups or toes to bar.
- Little things like the J hooks and the safety bars leave tiny bits of rubber in my bar due to the knurling. Completely minor, but a little annoying.
- The storage hooks are nice, but I always have to remove the rope implement due to my weight plates hitting it while back squatting. And I'm under 6ft.
- The bar storage tube is too close to the bottom weight plate holder so it's not easy to get plates on and off the holder on that side, so I leave majority of my weights leaning against the wall. So for me the weight plate holders are mostly unused.
- Lat pulldown bar is super lightweight and I'm not 100% sure how much weight it can handle. The welding looks suspect, but maybe it's totally fine. Overall I don't use it much, mostly because I have other exercises I prefer to do.
Solid rack for $310 considering the lat pulldown and all accessories included. I assembled it myself in a few hours. It took me a little longer due to assembling the sides incorrectly so I had to undo it and restart. Definitely pay attention to the orientation of the sides since they only go on one way due to the resistance band pegs. Also, don't over tighten the bolts. I managed to start bending the frame by over tightening.- I wish it was taller so I could do push press inside the rack, and pull-ups without having to bend my legs.
- I wish there was more thought put in to the weight holders, as the weight storage bars prevent me from being able to bench press while inside the rack due to my weight plates preventing me from racking the bar, something which almost made me return it at first. But I've worked around that by switching to incline press and using the long safety rod to hold the bar and using the safety frames just in case.
- I wish the entire rack was deeper. I'm used to a much deeper rack and being able to take a full step or two back when back squatting, but with this rack I'm limited to one step. I prefer to have a deeper rack so there's room in front of me and enough room behind me to bail and dump the bar. Not a huge deal, it just took some getting used to. I just have to squat a bit closer to the J hooks than I'm used to.
- The rack wobbles a little when doing pull-ups. I've switched to a slow strict pull-up so it's perfectly fine, there's no danger but it makes a little noise while doing it. I don't think this rack would be safe for Crossfit moves like kipping pull-ups or toes to bar.
- Little things like the J hooks and the safety bars leave tiny bits of rubber in my bar due to the knurling. Completely minor, but a little annoying.
- The storage hooks are nice, but I always have to remove the rope implement due to my weight plates hitting it while back squatting. And I'm under 6ft.
- The bar storage tube is too close to the bottom weight plate holder so it's not easy to get plates on and off the holder on that side, so I leave majority of my weights leaning against the wall. So for me the weight plate holders are mostly unused.
- Lat pulldown bar is super lightweight and I'm not 100% sure how much weight it can handle. The welding looks suspect, but maybe it's totally fine. Overall I don't use it much, mostly because I have other exercises I prefer to do.
Solid rack for $310 considering the lat pulldown and all accessories included. I assembled it myself in a few hours. It took me a little longer due to assembling the sides incorrectly so I had to undo it and restart. Definitely pay attention to the orientation of the sides since they only go on one way due to the resistance band pegs. Also, don't over tighten the bolts. I managed to start bending the frame by over tightening.Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
- I wish it was taller so I could do push press inside the rack, and pull-ups without having to bend my legs.
- I wish there was more thought put in to the weight holders, as the weight storage bars prevent me from being able to bench press while inside the rack due to my weight plates preventing me from racking the bar, something which almost made me return it at first. But I've worked around that by switching to incline press and using the long safety rod to hold the bar and using the safety frames just in case.
- I wish the entire rack was deeper. I'm used to a much deeper rack and being able to take a full step or two back when back squatting, but with this rack I'm limited to one step. I prefer to have a deeper rack so there's room in front of me and enough room behind me to bail and dump the bar. Not a huge deal, it just took some getting used to. I just have to squat a bit closer to the J hooks than I'm used to.
- The rack wobbles a little when doing pull-ups. I've switched to a slow strict pull-up so it's perfectly fine, there's no danger but it makes a little noise while doing it. I don't think this rack would be safe for Crossfit moves like kipping pull-ups or toes to bar.
- Little things like the J hooks and the safety bars leave tiny bits of rubber in my bar due to the knurling. Completely minor, but a little annoying.
- The storage hooks are nice, but I always have to remove the rope implement due to my weight plates hitting it while back squatting. And I'm under 6ft.
- The bar storage tube is too close to the bottom weight plate holder so it's not easy to get plates on and off the holder on that side, so I leave majority of my weights leaning against the wall. So for me the weight plate holders are mostly unused.
- Lat pulldown bar is super lightweight and I'm not 100% sure how much weight it can handle. The welding looks suspect, but maybe it's totally fine. Overall I don't use it much, mostly because I have other exercises I prefer to do.
Solid rack for $310 considering the lat pulldown and all accessories included. I assembled it myself in a few hours. It took me a little longer due to assembling the sides incorrectly so I had to undo it and restart. Definitely pay attention to the orientation of the sides since they only go on one way due to the resistance band pegs. Also, don't over tighten the bolts. I managed to start bending the frame by over tightening.Leave a Comment