Gyronetics Cast Iron Dumbell 15 kg (25 mm)






Specificaties
- Gyronetics Cast Iron Dumbbell 15 kg (25 mm)
- Arms, shoulders, chest muscles
- For home use
- Cast iron
- 4 x 2.5 kg weight plates and 2 x 1.25 kg weight plates, 1 x bar, diameter 25 mm, length 35 cm and 2 x screw caps
- 15 kg
- This Gyronetics barbell set consists of weight plates with an opening of approximately 25 mm and barbells with a 25 mm diameter. This size differs from the regular Gorilla Sports range, which consists of 31 mm/50 mm plates and bars.
BESCHRIJVING
This 15 kg cast iron barbell is ideal for building muscle strength. You can adjust the barbell to your own level, as it comes with four 2.5 kg plates and two 1.25 kg plates. The plates are securely fastened with the screw rings, which complete the total weight capacity of 15 kg.
Too light or too heavy?
A common phenomenon in every gym is this: Fanatical, often somewhat inexperienced gym-goers perform exercises—like bicep curls—with weights that are far too heavy. Their entire body shakes back and forth to lift the dumbbell. This completely defeats the purpose of the exercise: isolating a single muscle group. Back injuries are a real risk! Considering that the world's most famous bodybuilder, Arnold Schwarzenegger, performed a large portion of his biceps training with weights of 8, 10, 12, and 14 kg, you'll realize that 15 kg per arm is more than enough weight for most people for the time being, and more likely to be too much than too little. If you do want to train heavier, you can, of course, purchase a few extra weight plates for next to nothing, which you can easily slide onto the barbells.
The Gyronetics Cast Iron Dumbell 15 kg in detail:
1 x Dumbbell bar:
- 35cm length
- 25 mm diameter
- Recording area: 10.5 cm
- Internal handle size: 12.5 cm
-
Weight 1.5 kg
- 2 screw caps
- 4 weight plates of 2.5 kg
- 2 weight plates of 1.25 kg
Various exercises
Dumbbells offer countless exercises that allow you to train virtually every muscle group. To name a few: bicep curls and triceps extensions for your arms, dumbbell presses, upright rows, and lateral side raises for your shoulders, or dumbbell squats for your legs.
Dumbbells vs. machines
The main reason many professional athletes choose to train with free weights, such as dumbbells, is the endless variety and the fact that the body isn't "assisted" by a machine, which restricts its range of motion. Moreover, when training on machines, muscle attachments lag behind in development.