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My wife and I decided to save time and money by working out at home. In the mornings, we do WODs consisting mostly of sets and Tabatas of body weight reps (pushup, pullups, situps, burpees, etc.).

With our $$ savings vs gym membership, we've purchased some equipment like: Kettlebells, a Power Tower (for pullups, knee-ups and dips), and a Roman Chair for doing back raises. I thought these items were a great value (Power Tower: $109, Roman Chair: $79, Kettlebells: 75ยข / lb) -- considering how many exercises can be done with them.

But, other items like Plyo boxes and good quality medicine balls seem way over-priced. I went ahead and made my own Plyo boxes. And, I'd like to make other items as well.

Before I start hitting Amazon and Craigslist for more stuff (need some heavy stuff to move around)...

Anyone have any luck building their own equipment? How'd you do it? Also, what are your favorite at-home exercises / WODs?

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I've been daydreaming about building a squat rack or something similar, and possibly a DIY pullup/dip station too. – Futureboy Apr 25 2011 at 20:43

18 Answers

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This is SUCH a great blog - too good not to share! All about home-made crossfit-type gym equipment. Enjoy!

HOBO GYM

Enjoy!


www.Primal-Palate.com

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That is a seriously cool blog. Exactly the kind of stuff I'm looking for. It's on my blogroll now -- thanks! – Angelo - Latest in Paleo Sep 11 2010 at 23:07
Hey - no problem! Yeah I was kind of excited to respond, having a perfect link for ya! – The Food Lovers Sep 12 2010 at 0:24
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Not technically workout equipment, but I use a 7-inch diameter sawed-off PVC pipe as a foam roller. Without the foam.

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Yep. Good pain there. – Tom R. Apr 22 2011 at 15:35
YOWCH!!! That's ballsy! – Futureboy Apr 22 2011 at 15:54
Yep I have one of those too; it's awesome! – Jules K Apr 26 2011 at 15:37
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I built a set of parallettes (pdf [library.crossfit.com]).

Together with rings, two kettlebells and two medicine balls, it's a very versatile home gym for about 250 euros.

My favorite at-home exercises are:

On rings: regular & weighted pullups (with 16 or 32 kg KB attached), muscleups, dips, front/back levers, support position with rings turned outward

On parallettes: handstand pushups, tucked frogstand, low straddle holds..

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Awesome parallettes -- PVC is so damn versatile. Good stuff. – Angelo - Latest in Paleo Sep 11 2010 at 20:21
Oooh, nice. This is gold. – Justin - PaleoNotes Apr 22 2011 at 11:52
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Medicine balls are easy and cheap! Cut open a basketball, fill it with sand, and duct tape the crap out of it. Costs like $5, weighs about 20#. Ghetto-fit. :)

Likewise PVC paralettes are cheap and easy, and well worth it! I love mine.

For rings, I went with manufactured. More expensive but I love them.

-Tavis

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ghetto fit, lol. – Tom Feb 3 2011 at 21:34
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In case you didn't know, Ross Enamait has a great website. He talks a lot about home made fitness equipment.

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Awesome resource. Thanks, Pieter. – Angelo - Latest in Paleo Sep 11 2010 at 20:07
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I've built myself a couple slosh tubes and love them (info on marksdailyapple and/or Youtube search).

I also acquired some old tires that I enjoy hitting with sledge hammers.

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I also have a slosh-pipe and hit an old tire we pulled out of a canal with a sledge. – MF Apr 22 2011 at 15:00
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One of the first things I made was a couple of different sized sandbags. Quite simple, I used two sturdy woven jute sacks or hessian bags and filled to the required weight with beach sand. They're very useful and hard enough to handle so as to add a degree of difficulty. A big tractor tyre is good for flips. Resistance bands come in many sizes and strengths and are reasonably priced too.

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I've built myself a indoor pullup bar and hung some makeshift gymnastics rings off of it. It's made of galvanized gas piping, and it's not quite sturdy enough for kips and my ceiling isn't quite high enough for muscleups, but it seems to be working for my needs.

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www.marksdailyapple.com has some cool DIY equipment ideas, like slosh tubes, and I think there are instructions for a homemade medicine ball.

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The one piece that I made that doesn't get nearly as much use as I wish was a gada. It's an old Indian Wrestling tool that looks like a mace. Pretty simple, take a junior sized basketball (I used a legit ball and that might be why it gets so little use. Ops....) fill it with Quikcrete and put an old wooden shovel handle into it and let it set. Boom done. You use it doing overhead rotation, google gadas or Karl Gotch, he loved that.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQKsyqQPRpc

That is a link for making clubbells at home. Pretty cheap, check out Scott Sonnon for clubbell work.

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I made some DIY heavy Indian clubs! I love em! I even made some mini ones for my girlfriend. Mine were much cheaper as I used black iron pipe rather than anodized. they ended up being about 13 a piece, pretty cheap. adjustable too! – Futureboy Apr 22 2011 at 15:54
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You guys are going to love this

Go over to my blog to see how to make your own Paleo Style Throwing bag!!!!! Loads of fun alone or even better with a partner!!!!!!

The Famous Paleo Guy Throwing Bag!!!

Guy The Healthy Paleo Guy

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My group has a tire with a good rope. Wrap that thing around your waist and pull it up and down the street. My guess is your neighbors already think you are weird, so this should be no different. Put a mat in the bottom and add weight as necessary. I fear tire pull days.

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I made myself some heavy Indian clubs out of black iron pipe from Home Depot. They cost about $12-14 each, and they're super fun to swing, and a really good workout. Mine are very adjustable, as empty they weigh about 9#, and I have several different diameters of pipe that I fill the top portion with to make it weigh up to ~11.5#. alt text

11# is pretty heavy, but I really want to get some lead shot and make 'em REALLY heavy, see if I can still swing 'em. I also made some miniature versions for my girlfriend that weigh ~2.6#! They're fun to warm up with. I also have since wrapped the handles in Gorilla tape, and a layer of sports tape over that for better grip. At some point we're gonna spray paint them fun colors.

Joe, above, posted a link to a video where I got the idea. It was really fun!

I've been thinking about trying to build something like this: alt text

maybe out of black iron pipe? Wonder what the cost would be, or if it's even possible.

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anything is possible... I think black pipe would be over kill and un needed expense... – delirious_nomad Jan 12 2012 at 15:48
pretty heavy too... – Futureboy Jan 14 2012 at 5:43
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I wanted to share 2 clips of me working on a piece of homemade exercise equipment I developed.

The YouTube channel I am on is matthew3689

Thank you for your time.

matthew

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There are a lot of alternatives that we can used when it comes to work out equipment. Just analyze the things and you will know that it is useful and can be used as a nice alternatives.

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5 Gallon water jugs are very useful. Full, they weigh in at about 54 Lbs., and most come with handles.

When they are less than full, they provide for an unstable load, so you can fire off a lot of the stabilization muscles. Figure 8.35Lbs/Gal.

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Here's how I build my gym: go look around for some rocks of various weights and shapes. Start lifting them in various ways. Get logs and stuff too.

I don't get it. Why the hell do people spend so much money on barbells, dumbbells, etc when they could just go in their backyard or some local park/trail and gather some rocks and put them somewhere?

How much does it cost to build a gym? NOTHING! All you need are rocks, logs, etc, and those are FREE! This isn't just some ghetto way of doing it either. It's BETTER. You know how machines suck in comparison to free weights because there's a lot less stabilization going on when you're doing the machine? Well, that's why rocks (uneven weight distribution and irregular shape) are EVEN BETTER!

machines < free weights < rocks/logs/etc

Of course this only applies to people who live in a rural enough area to have rocks and stuff lying around, but that should be most of you. If you live deep in a city with no parks at all, this advice is of course useless.

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yeah, I'm a city dweller. – Futureboy Apr 26 2011 at 2:17
pieces of concrete. ought to be able to find that in the city. – delirious_nomad Jan 12 2012 at 15:49
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Where I live the gym is only $10/month

where do you live where its so expensive?

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Ha $10 a month?! Where the heck do YOU live? 1985? – Futureboy Apr 26 2011 at 6:37
Seriously!! Whoa! – blsdmomnwife Jun 20 2011 at 13:39

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