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  2. The best stationary bikes for seniors in 2025 - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-stationary-bikes...

    Staying active is crucial for seniors' health and well-being, but traditional forms of exercise can become challenging with age. Outdoor cycling, for instance, might lose its appeal due to ...

  3. Bench (weight training) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bench_(weight_training)

    A weight training bench is a piece of exercise equipment used for weight training. Weight training benches may be of various designs: fixed horizontal, fixed inclined, fixed in a folded position, with one adjustable portion, with two or more adjustable portions, with racks to hold bars, etc.

  4. Stationary bicycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stationary_bicycle

    A stationary bicycle (also known as exercise bicycle, exercise bike, spinning bike, spin bike, or exercycle) is a device used as exercise equipment for indoor cycling. It includes a saddle , pedals , and some form of handlebars arranged as on a (stationary) bicycle .

  5. Joe Weider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Weider

    The Weider Weight Training Log: Including a Daily Planner. Hushion House. ISBN 978-0-9684004-2-5. Joe Weider (2003). Training Notebook Complete Illustrated Guide to the 74 Best Muscle-building Exercises. Weider Publishing Limited. ISBN 9780945797333. Joe Weider (2004). Joe Weider's Muscle and Fitness Training Notebook. Weider Publishing Limited.

  6. Soloflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soloflex

    Soloflex home gym machines use an elastic element to provide resistance. The product also comes with an instructional DVD.. Soloflex's WBV Platform made news in July 2007 for a Consumer Reports review that demonstrated it had been using claims from research that may not apply to their machine. [3] "

  7. Life Fitness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_Fitness

    Life Fitness created the first computerized strength training program in 1988. [3] In 1991, Bally Total Fitness sold the company to Mancuso & Company, a private equity firm, for $62.5 million. [4] The same year, Life Fitness expanded into treadmills. Life Fitness was acquired by Brunswick Corporation in June 1997 for $310 million.