When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: inner thigh machine name plates for women over 60 lbs

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. How Suzanne Somers turned the ThighMaster into a viral ...

    www.aol.com/news/suzanne-somers-turned-thigh...

    Suzanne Somers was already a celebrity when the ThighMaster made her a fitness star. The “Three’s Company” actress, who died of breast cancer on Oct. 15, became a pitch woman for the ...

  3. ThighMaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thighmaster

    The ThighMaster was invented in Sweden by then-physical medicine intern (later "Dr.") Anne Marie Bennstrom (Prescott) as the "V-Bar" physical therapy device. [9] It later received US design patent number 343882S as "physical exerciser."

  4. Weight machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_machine

    Usually, each plate is marked with a number. On some machines these numbers give the actual weight of the plate and those above it. On some, the number gives the force at the user's actuation point with the machine. And on some machines the number is simply an index counting the number of plates being lifted. The early Nautilus machines were a ...

  5. Weight plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_plate

    A 2% or 3% variation is not uncommon, with plates from some manufacturers frequently being 10% or more over or under (a 45-pound plate can weigh as little as 40 pounds, or as much as 50). [ 8 ] [ 19 ] Tom Lincir, founder of the Ivanko Barbell Company, has encountered 45-pound (20.4 kg) plates weighing as little as 38 pounds (17.2 kg), or as ...

  6. A 6-Minute Inner Thigh Workout for the Lazy Girl in All of Us

    www.aol.com/entertainment/6-minute-inner-thigh...

    With a focus on the inner thighs–also known as the adductors–this workout is the epitome of short and sweet. As you flow through each move, working against gravity and your own body weight ...

  7. Leg press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leg_press

    Weight plates are directly attached to a sled, which is mounted on rails. The user sits below the sled and pushes it upward with their feet. These machines normally include adjustable safety brackets that prevent the user from being trapped under the weight. The 'cable' type leg press, or 'seated leg press', is commonly found in multigyms.