Fitness
Smart exercise cycles for weight loss – Times of India
By investing in a smart exercise cycle for weight loss, individuals can bring the gym into their own homes, ensuring consistency and comfort in their fitness routine. So, let’s dive into the world of smart exercise cycle and explore the best options available online to help you find the ideal fitness companion to achieve your weight loss goals.
Here’s a list of some of the best smart exercise cycles for weight loss available online:
Flexnest Flexbike Plus Smart Bluetooth Exercise Cycle
The Flexnest Flexbike Plus Exercise Cycle in black is a smart and versatile fitness companion for your home gym. Equipped with a 22-inch HD touchscreen and a speaker system, this smart exercise cycle offers an intense workout experience. Thanks to the smart Bluetooth connectivity, you can access over 500 live classes that offer a variety of workouts and workouts via the accompanying app. The smart exercise cycle features 100 resistance levels that allow you to customize the intensity of your cardio and spin workouts. Designed for convenience and effectiveness, the Flexbike Plus is a powerful addition to your fitness program.
Cockatoo CUB-01 Smart Series Magnetic Exercise Bike
For your home gym, the Cockatoo CUB-01 Smart Series Magnetic Exercise Bike is ideal. The magnetic resistance technology of this upright cycle provides a quiet and comfortable workout. Its small size allows it to fit in any room. A computerized LCD monitor built into the smart exercise cycle shows you the time, speed, distance traveled, calories burned, and heart rate. Thanks to the adjustable handlebars and seat, you can customize the cycle to your preferred comfort level. The Cockatoo CUB-01 also offers a free installation consultation, a one-year warranty, as claimed by the brand, and a hassle-free fitness solution.
Cultsport Smart Bike c2 Bluetooth Enabled Exercise Bike
The Cultsport Smartbike C2 smart exercise cycle with Bluetooth connectivity enhances your workout. With its 13.3-pound flywheel, it offers a comfortable and challenging riding experience. The exercise bike is suitable for people weighing up to 110 kg, which makes it appealing to a wide range of users. With the help of the Cultsport app, you can take advantage of trainer-led sessions that motivate and guide you through various exercises. Setting up the bike is easy thanks to the free at-home installation. With the Cultsport Smartbike C2, you can improve your exercise routine and achieve your health goals while staying at home.
Reach Contempo Smart Foldable Exercise Cycle
The Reach Foldable Exercise Cycle sold on Amazon is an asset to any exercise bike. With its sturdy design and back and hand support, this smart exercise bike ensures comfort during use. The magnetic resistance technology provides an efficient and quiet total body workout. The smart exercise cycle features an LCD that shows vital statistics such as time, speed, distance, calories burned, and pulse rate. Thanks to the pulse sensors integrated into the handles, you can easily check your heart rate while exercising. When you’re not using the device, its foldable design makes it easy to store. Expand your fitness routine with the Reach Foldable Exercise Cycle for a satisfying workout.
Fitkit by Cultsport FK4000 Bluetooth Enabled Exercise Spin Bike
The Fitkit by Cultsport FK4000 is a Bluetooth-enabled smart exercise cycle that will help you improve your fitness goals. With a flywheel weight of 13.22 pounds and a maximum load capacity of 120 kg, this exercise cycle offers a comfortable and challenging workout. Bluetooth connectivity with your device allows you to access programs taught to you by trainers that will motivate and inspire you. For optimal results, the package includes a free personalized nutrition plan that coordinates with your training program. You can train with peace of mind because there is a six-month guarantee, as claimed by the brand. Improve your fitness goals with the Fitkit by Cultsport FK4000 and benefit from a thorough and satisfying workout.
PowerMax Fitness BS-130 Spin Exercise Bike
The PowerMax Fitness BS-130 Spin Exercise Cycle is a premium smart exercise machine designed for a productive and fruitful workout. Thanks to its solid construction and 8 kg flywheel, it offers a consistent and comfortable ride. With a maximum weight capacity of 130 kg, the exercise bike is suitable for a wide range of users. The LCD allows you to monitor your time, distance, speed, calories burned, and heart rate. The three-piece crank, non-slip pedals, and supportive seat ensure your comfort and safety while exercising. The PowerMax Fitness BS-130 Spin Exercise Bike is a reliable option for your fitness training and comes with a one-year manufacturer’s warranty, as claimed by the brand.
Cultsport Smart Bike c2 Bluetooth Enabled Exercise Spin Bike
Reach a new level of fitness with the Cultsport Smartbike C2 Bluetooth Enabled Exercise Spin Bike. This smart exercise cycle offers a smooth and challenging workout thanks to its 13.3-pound flywheel. It is suitable for a wide range of people and has a maximum weight capacity of 110 kg. Enjoy easy and free installation at your home and get started right away. To receive guided workouts from Cultsport trainers to motivate and inspire you, connect via Bluetooth. The Cultsport Smartbike C2 is the ideal option to achieve your fitness goals at home, no matter how much experience you have in cycling.
Reach Vision MII Spin Bike
Introducing the Reach Vision MII Spin Bike, a multifunctional exercise cycle for workouts at home. With a 6.5 kg flywheel, this smart exercise cycle offers a gentle and challenging workout for the abdominal and lower body muscles. To change the intensity of your workout, you can switch resistance levels. The LCD shows time, speed, distance, calories burned, and more to keep you up to date on your progress. The machine is suitable for a wide range of users and has a maximum load capacity of 110 kg. Improve your workout routine with the Reach Vision MII Spin Bike and achieve your health and fitness goals from the comfort of your own home.
DISCLAIMER: The Times of India’s journalists were not involved in the production of this article. The product prices mentioned in the article are subject to change with offers given by Amazon.
Fitness
Sports Column: Finding the time to exercise in winter is difficult – The Vicksburg Post
Sports Column: Finding the time to exercise in winter is difficult
Published 4:00 am Sunday, January 19, 2025
Like a lot of people, I made a New Year’s resolution to exercise more, lose a little weight, and get into shape.
All right, “resolve” might be a strong word. Let’s call it a desire to get a little more value for my $50 a month gym membership than the once-a-month visits that became the norm in 2024.
For a while I’ve been stuck in the fitness paradox. When starting a regimen your muscles hurt after a workout so you want to rest, but the more you exercise the less they’ll hurt. Give it a couple of weeks and you’ll power through it.
It’s one of the biggest hurdles to getting into shape, and one I was reminded of again this week. I hit the pool for a modest 2,000-yard swimming workout, my first since Christmas, and had to grind hard to finish the last half of it. If I’d been in the water a couple times a week it would not have been nearly as taxing.
Time and work are big obstacles to exercising, of course. Especially this time of year. Getting home at 5 or 6 p.m. as the sun is setting and the temperature is dropping limits the neighborhood walks that are an easy way to burn calories. Covering a basketball game at Vicksburg High once a week and trekking up the hill from the parking lot in the dark isn’t going to cut it.
Another roadblock, for me at least, is other people.
I’m primarily a lap swimmer, so access to an indoor pool is the main reason I joined my gym. Unfortunately, it also means everyone else has access.
Besides other lap swimmers, that pool is used for children’s lessons and water aerobics classes.
When you lap swim you can’t see what’s in front of you — you look down, not ahead — so you’re trusting other people to watch out for you. Young kids trying to stay afloat have bigger concerns than avoiding you, so you need to develop a high level of ESP to avoid smashing into them like a torpedo into the side of a destroyer. It’s stressful.
The water aerobics folks have been nice and friendly when we’ve crossed paths — maybe a little too friendly. They tend to hang out and float for a while after their classes and get chatty. I don’t want to be rude, but also don’t want to swap life stories and recipes when I’m trying to stay on an interval and in rhythm.
The water aerobics folks have also scheduled thrice-weekly evening classes from 6 to 7 p.m., which is primetime for a post-work workout. I have to leave work early and go in the middle of the afternoon, or squeeze in a late swim and hope the gym managers don’t decide to lock up early.
Getting forgotten about and trapped in the pool overnight is a weird but not irrational fear, right?
I know there are more forms of exercise than swimming, and I probably need to explore those and stop making excuses. Hit the exercise bike or treadmill, for crying out loud. Lift a weight heavier than a 12-ounce Coke can.
Or just complain and rant. That burns calories, too.
•
Ernest Bowker is the sports editor of The Vicksburg Post. He can be reached at ernest.bowker@vicksburgpost.com
Fitness
Can a
Exercising regularly is important for preventing dementia. But if it’s hard to rack up the recommended amount of activity during the five-day work week (150 minutes of moderate-intensity activity, like brisk walking, or 75 minutes of vigorous activity, like swimming), consider the “weekend warrior” approach — fitting it all into one or two weekly sessions. The approach might offer the same brain health benefits, according to a study published online Oct. 29, 2024, by the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Researchers analyzed the health and self-reported activity information of more than 10,000 dementia-free people in Mexico who were followed for about 16 years. After accounting for factors that could influence the results, such as lifestyle habits, scientists found that weekend warriors were 13% less likely to develop mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a precursor to dementia, compared with people who didn’t exercise — about the same benefit seen in those who exercised during the work week. While the study was observational and can’t prove cause and effect, it supports the idea that even less frequent exercise might help protect brain health, and it might be a more convenient option for busy people.
Image: © Luis Alvarez/Getty Images
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Fitness
Fitness face-off – Harvard Health
What’s in style? The question doesn’t just relate to fashion. Indeed, even exercise styles go in and out of vogue, echoing trends fueled by social media and other cultural drivers.
Case in point: high-intensity bursts of exercise have grabbed headlines over the past couple of years, with scientists generating an array of studies examining the health benefits of short spurts of movement lasting from one to three minutes. That might consist of jumping jacks, lunges, running in place, jumping rope, air boxing, running up stairs, or any other high-intensity activity.
Meanwhile, plenty of research continues to focus on the health advantages of moderate-intensity, continuous movement. Mainstay choices for these sessions include brisk walking, cycling, jogging, and elliptical and treadmill use.
Given the swings in popularity between the differently paced alternatives, perhaps the most pressing question is which one is better for us. It might seem certain exercise patterns might prove superior to others, but we should resist the temptation to believe that, says Dr. Meagan Wasfy, a sports cardiologist at Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital.
“There are always trends, and each one claims to be the latest and best way to move your body,” Dr. Wasfy says.
Breaking down the data
What health benefits does each approach offer? A sampling of recent studies and official health guidance weighs in.
Evidence supporting exercise bursts includes the following:
- A 2022 analysis of data collected on more than 25,200 people who didn’t otherwise exercise (average age 62, 56% women) published in Nature Medicine found that those who routinely did brief bursts of vigorous activity — defined as three bouts, each lasting a minute or two — had significantly lower odds of dying or developing cardiovascular disease over the following seven years than participants who didn’t.
- A 2023 analysis in JAMA Oncology of more than 22,000 people who didn’t exercise (average age 62, 55% women) suggested that even short, intermittent periods of intense movement — a minute at a time, three or four times a day — was linked with 18% lower cancer risk over the following 6.7 years, especially for cancers of the breast, uterus, or colon.
Evidence supporting longer, moderate-intensity exercise includes the following:
- Adults who do any amount of moderate-to-vigorous exercise derive health benefits, including reducing their risks of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and some forms of cancer, according to the CDC.
- A 2022 analysis in JAMA Internal Medicine involving 78,000 people (average age 61, 55% women) found their risk of heart disease, cancer, and premature death dropped by 10% over the following seven years for every 2,000 steps they logged each day, with the benefit peaking at 10,000 steps.
Sense a theme from the findings? Regardless of intensity, it’s apparent that any movement is good for your health.
“No one comes out ahead with regards to the long-term outcomes,” Dr. Wasfy says. “What matters most is moving your body and doing more of it. The sum of movement, over the course of a year or decades of your life, is what matters.”
Exercise caveats
One clear advantage to exercise bursts — or its cousin, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) — is that any high-intensity activity enables you to fulfill recommended exercise guidelines in less time. Health organizations advise adults to get at least 150 minutes of moderate exercise or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise (or some equivalent combination of the two) per week. For an HIIT workout, you alternate vigorous, short sprints with brief periods of rest or lower-intensity movement.
“It’s a time-efficient way to get your recommended exercise dose in less time,” Dr. Wasfy says.
High-intensity exercise does pose a few drawbacks, however. These include a greater risk of injuries and inflammation to joints and muscles. Additionally, for people with heart disease or its risk factors, sudden bursts of exercise could be more likely to bring on new cardiac symptoms.
“If you’re writing an exercise prescription not knowing anything about someone’s health history, you’d write it for moderate-intensity, continuous exercise,” Dr. Wasfy says.
If you’d like to increase your exercise intensity but have existing heart disease — or symptoms such as chest pain with vigorous movement — talk to your doctor in advance. Older adults who’ve noticed their ability to exercise has declined should also speak up.
Ultimately, Dr. Wasfy says, you should choose a style of exercise you really like — and will do consistently — and disregard fitness trends. “If you’re healthy,” she says, “it’s really your choice.”
Image: © Luis Alvarez/Getty Images
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