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BMI's Health & Wellness Mastermind Group

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Açaí Replaces Wheatgrass In Blenders At Juice Bars

April 18th, 2003

Açaí Replaces Wheatgrass In Blenders At Juice Bars
By Tatiana Boncompagni

Special to THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Sitting at a cafe table in a chic Manhattan fitness club, Kacy Duke takes a sip of a purplish-pink smoothie made with bananas, juices and açaí, a fruit from the Amazon that fans say helps boost energy and lower cholesterol. "This is good," says Ms. Duke, a personal trainer who drinks about six of them a week.

Wheatgrass, protein shakes -- so 2002. At juice bars and health stores around the country, the hip new taste is açaí, (pronounced ah-sigh-EE) a grape-size, deep-purple berry that grows atop palm trees in the Brazilian jungle. In the two years since it hit the U.S., sales have jumped fivefold to $2.5 million. "People drive out of their way to get it," says Brandon Gough, the company's vice president of marketing. Even non-health types are catching on: Restaurants are serving it with dinner entrées.

Fans say the fruit (which comes to the U.S. as frozen pulp) not only tastes good, but also is good for you -- packed with anthocyanins, the same antioxidants that give red wine its health benefits. And, in a hat trick of health-bar chic, it's good for the Amazon, too, because it's collected by local families who can earn as much as $1,000 during the December-to-August harvest season (twice as much as they can usually make). "It gives them income and another land use besides cutting down the trees and raising cattle," says Chris Kilham, who teaches ethno botany at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Of course, the fruit is just the latest exotic newcomer looking for a place in U.S. produce aisles -- remember the star fruit? And the açaí's newfound cachet would probably take a lot of Brazilians by surprise: There, açaí, whose taste has been likened to blueberry with a hint of chocolate, typically is eaten as a pudding like mush over bananas for breakfast.

As to the health claims: "It is very nutritional," says Elisabetta Politi, a nutritionist with the Duke University Diet and Fitness Center in Durham, N.C. Ms. Duke, who not only drinks the stuff, but also has mixed it into a homemade mask for her skin. "I thought because of all of the antioxidants, it would be good," she says. (The result: "I glowed," she says.)
***

Click here to begin your Amazon adventure!
http://www.mynewsuccess.com/healing/acaiberry2.html

Friday, September 23, 2005

Success is in the Starres - For this "Match Made in Heaven"

The sky’s the limit for Raven and Calvenn Starre; a young, early 30’s couple who each had made their mark (and their million!) before their starre-crossed meeting at a $10,000 per person Tony Robbins personal development seminar in Hawaii.

Before becoming “team Starre”, both Raven and Calvenn had experienced tremendous success in their respective careers. Raven had already retired at the ripe old age of 28, after becoming a millionaire through the network marketing industry. “I had over 20,000 people in my group in that ten year span I worked from 18 to 28 years old. I retired and started traveling the world, and hoping to keep improving,” reflects Raven. “That’s why I went to the seminar. I never want to stay at the same level…change is good. If people aren’t afraid of change, they can make millions!”

Calvenn was an Executive Vice President (at one time, the youngest in Texas) of Welker Engineering, an international oil company, at the time he landed in Hawaii for the fateful nine-day seminar that would change his life. He was there “looking for the edge” and he found it, in an unexpected sort of way. “When I met Raven at the seminar, it was a match made in heaven.” “She was the source of my inspiration. Within six weeks, I decided to leave the company, and we decided to put our business and entrepreneurial skills together.”

Together, the pair built a multi-million dollar online boutique (www.shopjuici.com) which today receives a quarter million hits per week. Then, after a five year break from network marketing, they decided they needed a new challenge and within six months had built an international organization from Hong Kong to Australia. But for these veteran entrepreneurs, there was reason to doubt their involvement.

“We realized there were some major things missing for us. Number one was leadership, even though the company had a good product. And we were uncomfortable with the compensation plan,” they explain.

“So when we heard about Monavie, the leadership, and the compensation plan, that’s when we went crazy! This is the best comp plan I have ever seen, and I’ve seen a lot!” exclaims Raven, who had worked previously within several different network marketing companies. “This is without a doubt going to be copied, it’s so amazing. It’s all about the team, about helping the “little guy” because if he has a good upline, then he just has to build one leg.”

Duly impressed by an experienced leadership team, the Starres immediately signed on with MonaVie and started building a fresh new business with all new people. With MonaVie, they saw perfect timing (Raven notes, “96% of all MLM millionaires sign up in the pre-launch phase or the first 12 months of the company”), a product formulated around the Amazon acai berry already gaining national recognition on “Oprah” and the NBC “Today Show”, and they recognized unbeatable leadership giving them the confidence in the company they had previously lacked elsewhere.

The Starres have moved to be closer to MonaVie and now live in Salt Lake City, UT, with their two-year-old son. When not hosting leaders from around the world, they split their time at their Oregon summer home and their winter home in La Quinta, CA. Speaking of their new business venture into the world of MonaVie, Raven is absolutely convinced. “I’ve never done anything so effortlessly in my life."



Press Contact: Stephan Bourget & the Starre Team
Company Name: Success Team Builders
Phone: (418) 664-0785

Click here to begin your Amazon adventure!
http://www.mynewsuccess.com/healing/product.html

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Choosing the Right Treadmill for You

by Jodie Phillips


Convenience, ease and the efficiency of Treadmills have made them a revelation in the health industry. We have gone through such a variety of fitness exercises which either break your back trying to get them right, or are too difficult to master, let alone do them every day. But with a treadmill, you can burn calories the simplest was possible, by walking or running. Which, by the way, are the two most natural exercises you can imagine! You walk when you are a 2 year old, some even before that, and yet when it comes to exercising people turn to complex gym routines and diets to stay fit!

Work schedules, personal security, weather and health status; all make us reluctant to go out doors for walks on a regular basis. So it isn’t a surprise that even the world’s most advanced societies are facing health dilemmas. People in general don’t have time for gym workouts, and those who do are too exhausted by long work days to do them. As for recommenders of walking as an exercise, Treadmills not only make exercise easier, they cut out the obtrusive factors which hinder us in forming routines.

In addition to providing some very helpful bits of information along the way, treadmills provide a wide variety of exercise options. From walking to hill climbing, jogging to running, you can pace yourself as you like so there is something for everyone in the use of treadmills. However, with the market being so overcrowded with a wide range of treadmills, we see a need for guidance in making the best choices for you.

At the moment there are three distinct types of treadmills available on the market. So to pick out the best treadmill for you, let’s have a quick look at what each one of them has to offer.

First up is the Manual Treadmill; you don’t have to be a fitness guru to understand that a manual treadmill is non-motorized. It’s a simple machine with a belt and rollers that you move with your effort. The simpler a machine, the fewer are the chances of things going wrong with it. So that’s a positive feature; it will last longer. However, since the treadmill’s belt doesn’t move itself you can set your own pace, which is not so good for the lazy people who are unlikely to push themselves.

Next, there is the Motorized Treadmill with features to set the pace of your walk, jog or run. You can set your required pace and keep up with it over a period of time to get optimum exercise out of the time you spend on it. Then there are the ‘incline’ options in some motorized treadmills; these can help you decide the amount of incline you want for your run. The negatives go with the positives though, it’s a complicated piece of equipment and when it has problems they are complicated as well. Plus a motorized treadmill is going to be more expensive, compared to a manual treadmill, but with those features, you have to decide for what you want.

Now you can’t say you don’t have space for a treadmill; Foldable Treadmills have made that excuse redundant. Foldable treadmills can be stored in a negligible amount of space. These are great for use in the office or at home, whenever you take a break. So, if you are facing schedule constraints, or are just too lazy to take up regular exercise, then a foldable option might just be the best treadmill for you.

Frankly speaking, there is no hard and fast rule to determine which type of treadmill is better than the other. Though a comparison of treadmill features does help you decide which one is the best for you. Keep in mind, the treadmill that suits a friend perfectly isn’t certain to be even rated as ‘decent’ for you. So read up some treadmill reviews and choose according to your own situation.

A top factor that will affect your choice would be your personal age and weight. Though some might say that exercise is necessary for everyone, but the mode of exercise has to differ accordingly with the individual traits. A bulky person may need a wider belt or the handlebars may obstruct the usual path of the arm movement, so check the details before you buy. Age matters when you choose as well, especially for older people, the resilience of the deck and the heart rate control are very important. Safety features help every age so make sure that you don’t compromise on those. Similarly, whether you opt for running or walking determines not only the top speed you need from your treadmill, but also the size of the belt as well.

You look for a treadmill when you are conscious that you need to improve on your fitness levels. However, your aspirations determine the sort of treadmill you need. If you want to burn as much as you can in good time, trying out the incline options isn’t a bad idea at all. Again heart rate interactive checks are very handy to get you to your optimum fitness levels without doing damage to your body. ‘Who will be using it?’ is just as important as ‘how will you use it?’, if you buy a treadmill while targeting the fitness improvement of your whole family, then keep in mind any inhibitions that might stop a member from utilizing the treadmill to the full. Chances are if you are willing to spend enough, there will be a treadmill that will suit a diverse group of individuals like a glove!

Long or short workouts determine the quality of motor you need for your treadmill. If you use the treadmill in short bursts the ‘peak duty’ might not be as useless as you first thought. It can be maintained for a short period of time by the treadmill so perhaps that restriction can help keep your treadmill’s price down

How much do you use it? The amount of workout that is likely to be done on your treadmill should affect your choice of equipment. The more you want to use it, the more we would recommend that you go for high quality treadmills. Repairs will even out the price difference between cheap treadmills and high-end treadmills when you compare them in the long run. Consequently, it would be advisable to go for the higher priced quality treadmill rather than a cheap treadmill that would spend more time with the repairman than it does with you!



About the Author
Jodie Phillips is the owner of a treadmill review site at http://www.home-treadmill-review.com and she shares her knowledge and research on treadmills in a series of articles.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

The Acai Berry - No.1 on Oprah Winfrey Site's Top Ten

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - On Saturday, January 8, 2005, Monarch Health Sciences introduced MonaVie, a potent fruit juice blend of 19 fruits with its main ingredient the Amazon's Acai berry, named first on the world's top ten list of 'super foods' by Dr. Nicholas Perricone on the Oprah Winfrey show. The official MonaVie launch took place in Salt Lake City with the company posting record sales in the following week. In addition to domestic sales including Hawaii and Alaska, the company is now shipping to Singapore, Australia, Canada, and Puerto Rico, with plans to open more Southeast Asia markets in the near future.

MonaVie has received high interest primarily based on the Acai berry only recently discovered by the Brazilian elite and North Americans, and consumed primarily as a frozen “slush'. The Acai (pronounced ah-sah-ee) berry has gained worldwide attention particularly in the past year when it was featured in:



‘The Perricone Promise’, by Dr. Nicholas Perricone and recommended by Oprah Winfrey! The doctor says on Oprah, “the Acai Berry is listed as the world's number one “super food for age-defying beauty.”



The London Times - Açaí is the fruit of an Amazonian palm tree with the nutritional content that makes other fruits blush with inadequacy.



Vogue Magazine calls it “the next big workout cocktail'!



NBC Today reported, “the anomabi Indians have believed for centuries that the Acai holds unique power…and is believed to help women after birth and to give anyone who drinks it a burst of energy.'

The Acai berry may be the most potent of all “forgotten fruits'-- those raw, whole fruits that are little known or consumed.

The scientific facts about the Acai berry are impressive by any standards:

- a protein profile similar to an egg
- a fatty acid profile similar to olive oil

- contains the leading source of anthocyanins--often reported as 30 times that of
the protective potential of red wine. One of the many attributes of anthocyanins
is its anti-inflammatory qualities

- high in fiber

- low glycemic index
- more than 16 phytonutrients and anti-oxidants.
- copious amount of trace minerals (Co, Cr, Cu, Mo...) and macrominerals (Ca, Fe)
- generous amount of vitamins including vitamin E
- excellent source of plant sterols, particularly Beta-Sitosterol which is associated
with cholesterol lowering capabilities.

The MonaVie product consists of the Acai berry as the headline ingredient, with 18 other all-star fruits uncommonly rich with nature's benefits as identified by Monarch Health Sciences' research team: pomegranate, bilberry, passion fruit, wolfberry, blueberry, kiwi, cranberry, apricot, prune, nashi, aronia, pear, acerola, banana, camu camu, lychee fruit, and dark-and white pigment grapes. These fruits were added to create the right balance of health-building phytonutrients contained in the entire color spectrum. This addition of variety adds to, complements and synergistically enhances the product's potential. To best capture all the rich nutrients, the fruits were pureed in their entirety—flesh, skin, and seed.


MonaVie Update
As of April 1, 2005 company sales have risen 375% from the January 8th launch!


Press Contact: Stephan Bourget
Company Name: Success Team Builders
Phone: (418) 664-0785

Click here to begin your Amazon adventure!

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

How To Build A $100 Home Gym That Delivers Results

By: Jim O'Connor - The Fitness Promoter August 5, 2005
(c) Jim O'Connor/Wellness Word, LLC - All Rights Reserved

So you want to save valuable time traveling to the gym by building your own home gym. Do to the long hours worked, and strenuous commutes, more and more people are opting to squeeze there workouts in by exercising in the comfort of their own homes.

There are many advantages to creating your very own home gym. It is shown that people who have home gym equipment in their homes tend to exercise more often. Let's also not forget about saving valuable time, and money on monthly health club dues. It seems like all the new estates being built in Los Angeles plan for a room to be used for their own, personal home gym.

The only drawbacks to owning a home gym are its overwhelming cost, and space limitations. But wait, maybe not! Sure you can purchase individual station machines, a treadmill, a bike, and dozens of free weights. However, is that really needed to get outstanding results? Do you have to spend $10,000 plus to get yourself a home gym that really delivers results? The answer is absolutely not!

Yes, you can treat yourself to state of the art equipment, but will you get better results than a gym which costs less than $100? The answer is no!

Being an Exercise Physiologist in Beverly Hills, California, and author of Home Gym Shopping Secrets, I have proved you can achieve outstanding results using a home gym which costs less than $100. I see that proof each and every day while consulting with motivated clients throughout Los Angeles, California.

What I see daily is people not having the space for many pieces of home gym equipment, or not willing to make a big investment.

Listed below is one of many home gym solutions I mention in Home Gym Shopping Secrets. http://www.HomeGymShoppingSecrets.com/

The $100 Home Gym Solution

Dave, an Oscar winning screenwriter whom I consult with, uses his $100 home gym twice per week, and gets amazing results. As a matter of fact, he pays me much more each week for my services than he did for his complete home gym. His strength and endurance has tripled over the past year, all while losing 6% body fat. This has all been accomplished using his $100, cost effective, space saving home gym. As a matter of fact, we exercise outside, year round, in his driveway! His home gym is comprised of the following equipment which I have listed below. If your goals and medical history are compatible with this type of program, you too can do something similar. Please refer to Home Gym Shopping Secrets and Wellness WORD Multimedia Newsletter for additional fitness rogramming information.

**LIST OF EQUIPMENT**

1 Large Swiss Ball
Stretching Mat
Pair of 15 pound dumbells
Pair of 20 pound dumbells
1 Heavy Black Ther-A-Band
1 Resistance Band With Handles
10 Pound Medicine Ball

That is it; simple as that! Now what you do with all this equipment is specific to your medical history, and personal, primary goals. For more information on individual fitness programming, please visit Wellness Word Newsletter, and Home Gym Shopping Secrets.

The program Dave uses is more of a core strengthening regimen using various functional movements. We even have him doing in the neighborhood of 250 pushups throughout his circuit training routine. Just remember, programs are created on an individual basis, and are not so called canned as one routine fits all. The two resources I have mentioned above will help you get started on creating the your proper program.

So the next time you think you can't afford a home gym, think again. YOU CAN!

__________________________________________________

To receive your complimentary subscription to Wellness Word Newsletter (multimedia), visit http://www.WellnessWord.com right now!

Discover all the tips, tricks, and truth in multimedia video, audio, and text.
________________________________________________

*** Attention: Ezine Editors/ Website Owners ***
Feel free to reprint this article in its entirety in your eZine, Blog, Autoresponder, or on your website as long as the links, text, and resource box are not altered in any way.

Jim O'Connor - Exercise Physiologist/The Fitness Promoter

Copyright (c) - Wellness Word, LLC
9461 Charleville Blvd. #312
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
1-866-935-5967

http://www.HomeGymShoppingSecrets.com
http://www.WellnessWord.com
http://www.HomeGymResources.com



About the Author
Jim O'Connor, Beverly Hills celebrity fitness consultant, has conducted thousands of personal fitness consultations with celebrities, business executives, and highly motivated professionals throughout Los Angeles. He is the Chief Exercise Physiologist for Wellness WORD, LLC, a health and fitness promotion company, and author of Home Gym Shopping Secrets,as well as a nationally known multimedia health and fitness newsletter called Wellness WORD.

Monday, September 19, 2005

1st Case of MonaVie Sells For $5000!

The 1st Case of MonaVie is Auctioned Off to Benefit the Tsunami Relief Fund

On January 8, 2005, the very first case of MonaVie Juice to ever cross the assembly line was auctioned to benefit the Tsunami Victims.

The auction started at $200, and kept rising until it sold for an unbelievable price of $5,000. The winners of the first ever MonaVie case? Raven and Calvenn Starre.

Distributors for years will talk about the $5,000 case of MonaVie.

May our love, support, and prayers find the souls of despair in South East Asia and for a brief moment may a whisper from America calm even one soul.

We are one and God is with us… The Starre Family


Press Contact: Stephan Bourget & the Starre Team
Company Name: Success Team Builders
Phone: (418) 664-0785

Click here to begin your Amazon adventure!
http://www.mynewsuccess.com/healing/acaiberry2.html

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Treadmills - Understanding the Technical Aspects

by Jodie Phillips


Once you set out to buy a treadmill, you can be sure that you will have enough options available to get your mind buzzing. So the ideal thing is to have some defined ideas of what aspects are required from your treadmill, and what is simply out of the question.

Horsepower has continuously baffled buyers when they look to choose a motorized treadmill. Some dealers cash in on the confusion and rant the ‘bigger the better’ rhetoric. Therefore, you have to be well versed, or at least apparently well versed, in what you want. A 2.0 HP motor would do well for your treadmill, anything less than 1.5 is certainly going to wear out much quicker than you’d expect, so go for the optimum option. The idea is to look out for the gimmicks don’t pay heed to the terms like ‘peak horsepower’ or ‘treadmill duty’; they mean nothing in the long run when you want consistent speed. The important thing is the ‘continuous duty’; which marks that the motor will be able to produce a continuous 2HP for a full 24 hr motor usage. It is a practice with manufacturers to stamp the ‘continuous duty’ horsepower on DC motors, so having a look under the hood wouldn’t hurt either.

Now a motor’s HP will get you going, but bad Motor Electronics can mar the quality of experience you will have with your treadmill, not to mention the amounts you will have to pay for repairs! Seasoned manufacturers make sure that their treadmills have a steady clip which utilizes a microprocessor to sense the belt load and adjust accordingly for silky operation. So the best treadmills will be the ones that sense your resistance if you try to slow down, and adjust accordingly to keep the set pace going smoothly. Try slowing down a treadmill while hanging on to the handle bars, and you’ll know what I’m talking about. A low quality, cheap treadmill will show her displeasure at your rudeness by jerking and groaning, but the quality ones, I have already described.

The Motor Toque is the thing that rotates the shaft which ultimately moves against your load. So plainly speaking, the motor torque has to be high to take the load of a human body, a potentially heavy human body at that. It’s simple enough to understand that you need high torque for your treadmill. But also, the number of revolutions per second have to be low. Otherwise the treadmill might make you appreciate it at high speeds but at low speeds the high revs would really tax the motor. And consequently the motor will not last long enough to justify a good buy.

With a variety of treadmill available, the buyer should be sure what kind of Speed he wants from his treadmill. Whether you want to use it for running, jogging, or just walking determines which machine would be best for you. For walking, speeds from 0 to 6mph would do fine, but for runners the best treadmill would be the one which offers speeds from 0 to 12 mph. Running a motor at top speed of its speed limit over a long period of time is a sure way to wear out the motor is a hurry, so avoid that if you don’t like to pay for repairs. For starters, the safe speed is half a mile, per hour, to make sure that the jerk of the initial start won’t spill you over.

The treadmill’s Belt has to suit your operation style as well. If you want to use the treadmill for running the belt should be 18 to 22 inches wide at least, to keep the runner safe. While the length would have to suit long strides for runners so something between 50 to 54 inches would be good. If the length or the width is not optimum for your use, then stay clear of such treadmills, as tripping on deck moving 5 mph is very likely to have you end up doing crosswords in a hospital bed. With manufacturers competing to be the best treadmill makers, the better ones provide two-ply belts that last longer and are less likely to curl at the sides. So that’s the recommended stuff as it will last longer than a cheaper single ply belt.

The treadmill Deck should have shock absorbing qualities to recommend it. Usually a good manufacturer will make sure that the deck provides ease to the user. In comparison with roads, a good treadmill deck provides almost 40% shock absorption to lessen the impact on the feet and joints. Therefore, for buyers who have joint problems, or those who don’t wish to develop any, the best thing is to go for well cushioned, pre treated decks. This will, of course, result in fewer maintenance requirements. Though more impact protection is certainly going to hit you right where it matters; on the wallet.

Though it is necessary to have the necessary Resilience, all the talk about the impact protection shouldn’t deceive you into buying a cheap treadmill with an overly soft deck. What you need is a deck that absorbs some of the impact; rubber bushings under a flexible deck serve the purpose ideally. However, when you go out to actually shop for the best treadmill for you, you have to remember that there are no set standards for cushioning and provision of resilience. The cushioning varies from treadmill to treadmill almost. Review treadmills; try out as many as you can, be critical. Don’t fall for ‘the softer the better’ sales line; resilience is not meant to make the deck spongy or bouncy, a good pair of shoes and a decent deck resilience is enough to provide relief to your feet and joints, so go for it!

For treadmill Rollers though, ‘the bigger the better’. This logic is based in simple physics; rollers with larger diameter have more surface area so the bearings have to do a lot less work in comparison with smallish rollers. Plus there is the belt to take care of, if you have small rollers the belt will have to put up with more tension and consequently there will be more repair work needed as well. And of course the larger rollers have more load bearing capacity so they need less repair work than the smaller rollers, who would be rolling themselves rugged if you regularly take up high speeds. Also, keep in mind that solid rollers are better than hollow ones, and prefer steel rollers to aluminum, which start to form an almost sand paper like material between the belt and the roller surface in quick time.

Though treadmills offer wide range of Incline options, they usually vary between 2-25%. Quite understandably, cheap treadmills have manual incline options but the costlier ones offer motorized incline features. Again, motors make the treadmill more complicated piece of equipment so the repair charges increase, along with the initial price. The thing to keep in mind about incline motors is that they should be quite about their efforts, if they groan as they increase incline then beware, they will die down on you a lot sooner than you’d expect. It can be easy to look for the widest range of choice and decide upon that, but seriously speaking, mostly you don’t need more than 10% of incline as more can be hazardous for health. So, an innovative way might be to go for the motorized incline treadmills which keep your heartbeat in check and automatically adjust the incline to keep it smooth. Those who still can’t get their heartbeat to the optimum high can just think how much they paid for the treadmill; I bet the treadmill would go downhill if it could!

Potentially the most luring thing about a treadmill is its Control Panel or console. There is a wide variety of features available on these consoles; from a speed monitor to heart rate monitor, electric incline control, distance and time, the treadmills boast a variety of features. However, too many buttons and gauges may get confusing, as well as potentially risky because they complicate the treadmill further and increase repair costs. There are LCD displays in the cheap treadmills while the high-end treadmills use LED displays that emit light from the display to make them more useful. Displays that are large simple and readable are the best options for those who don’t want to spend on luxuries such as the high-end treadmills. A great feature of some high-end treadmills is the display that show error in case some part of the treadmill isn’t in perfect health, definitely a good thing to have on hand, but not necessary. Ideally, the control panel should be the last thing on your mind when you decide on a treadmill, they can catch your fancy at one glance and then you wouldn’t make many smart choices afterwards, beware!

A Treadmill has a Motor Controller which is an electrical power board that polices the current of the motor. Usually they are either Pulse Width Modulated board (PWM) or Solid State Control Rectifier board (SCR). A PWM board provides more DC voltage than the SCR one, as it has DC current running. Therefore, PWM boards are much quieter than SCR boards, which is recommendation enough. To add to that, they require less repair services as there are no chokes and filters to worry about, and the stronger current results in more tolerance while the heavier users are on. If you still aren’t convinced then let me add that the PWM have lower electric costs, and they produce less heat as opposed to the SCR boards. Therefore, their life and performance are enhanced to make them user friendly and economical in the long run.

Heart Rate Control is essential for optimum workout in the least amount of time. The more effort you make the higher the heart rate is the simple rule with the stuff. It is ideal to have a heart rate monitor on your control panel to keep the rate in check, going over board with too much effort can damage the heart, so keep an eye on it. As for the quality of heart rate monitors, the idea is to choose one that of the interactive monitors. These not only keep the heart beat in check but also increase or reduce the incline to keep your heart rate optimum. Good heart rate control monitors use chest straps for evaluation, while other, less accurate monitors use ear and finger clip pulses for monitoring purposes.

Usually, the Frame of the treadmill is made of either aluminum or alloy steel. Though steel has the potential to rust quickly but, if you take good care of it, they are stable enough to do you proud. Aluminum, on the other hand, is lighter than steel and provides easy portability, plus it doesn’t rust. However, the sturdiness of aluminum is low and it is not advisable to choose it ahead of steel for that very reason. Another important thing about frames is the way they are made. Welded frame should be preferred over bolted ones; simply because bolts and are far less durable in the long run, thought they might make moving easier, but that still isn’t enough to recommend them over welded frames.

Handlebars on treadmills are used for stability and balance so they should be within the reach of the user if he needs to use them. However, before selecting a treadmill, be sure that the handlebars do not come into the path of your arm motion whether you walk or run. The handlebars should be sturdy, avoid plastic ones as they might not last much. Plus the grips have to be comfortable for easy usage. It really doesn’t matter how many handlebars are there in your treadmill, they can be one or two rails over the front of the control panel or a couple on the sides. What does matter however, is that handlebars should be out of your way, a swinging arm hitting a handlebar on the full might not be the ideal way to exercise, so choose wisely.

Like other moving machines, motorized treadmills should have Safety features that reduce accident potential to a bare minimum. Handlebars, as we have discussed, play a very important role in safety of the users. Along with those, emergency shut off is something that needs to be present in a good treadmill. Having said that, it would be no use to have an emergency shut off switch if it is out of reach, so check that as well. Similarly, the controls to limit the incline or speed or to turn to a gradual shut down should be within the user’s reach as well. Make sure that the treadmill has a safe starting speed and a gradual shut down as well, jerky beginnings or abrupt slowing may put the user in a bit of a tumble. An inbuilt circuit breaker is always handy for expensive motorized treadmills so in case of power breakdowns or accidental power problems the treadmill should shut its system down to prevent damage to the machine.

The Warranty; A quality treadmill is a long term investment. When you pay top dollars for the best treadmills, remember that you should have a guarantee that the machine will work properly over at least over a period of 1-3 years. Mostly good manufacturers offer lifetime warranty on frames while the motorized parts, electronics along with the deck and belt should have a minimum of 1 year guarantee with labor to change the problematic parts in that period. Reliable manufacturers provide even 2-3 years warranties for the parts but 1 year of labor, which is fair enough. Guard against paying added money for extra warranty as that is not likely to do you much good. However, it is always helpful to find out if the treadmill you are looking to buy will have its parts available for some time to come. Surely you don’t wish your treadmill to become redundant material two years down the lane.

For most people, the Price of the treadmill becomes the check that hold them back from choosing the best option possible. Usually you would find that below 1000$ are the sort of treadmills we have done our best to guard you against. So for a quality motorized treadmill, be prepared to spend over a 1000$ at least. The high-end treadmills average over 3000$ so they rattle your pocket considerably when you go for those, but as we have discussed earlier the competitive market has done consumers some amount of good, so some excellent treadmills are available around the 2 K mark as well. The catch is to remember that buying a treadmill is a long term investment for you, so have to assess the feasibility according to your own resources. You can go for refurbished treadmills or used treadmills that are in good condition, but consider only quality treadmills if you buy a used treadmill, a low quality refurbished treadmill will certainly not be a good buy. Choose wisely, live well!



About the Author
Jodie Phillips is the owner of a treadmill review site at http://www.home-treadmill-review.com/ and she shares her knowledge and research on treadmills in a series of articles.