mbasic wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 9:50 am
The 4" wide uprights can be a problem.
I don't know what the exact out to out dimesion is, but its one or other:
- you are either running out of room for your hands (lowbar squat + long arms or inflexi-shoulders/elbows),
OR
- the plates and/or sleeve collars will hit the uprights. You are re-racking into the uprights, not a bladed J-cup or j-hook that juts out a bit from the upright. Or, as Hardartery explains, with only a 24" window, you better setup exactly center front-to-back AND side-to-side (a plate is 18" dia). Plates may hit uprights, etc.
It wobbles like a mofo when you rerack weights. Even light weights.
In videos of people doing chinups .... it starts to wobble.
Screwing and unscrewing the
J-hooks
Bolts is a pain.
Those are every bit of stupid as:
Most all racks now have the fine adjustment hole spacing thru the bench press zone/area.
That's nice to find the exact spot when you are self-performing the bench-press liftoff ...and you can dial in the safeties fairly exact also.
For squats, OHP, rack pulls, etc .... fine adjustment spacing isn't that big of a deal; bench it can be.
"Shim your bench up/down" ... that sux, benching in a power-rack requires a (shitty) portable bench already.
With a 1-1/2" holes (for an 1-1/4" pin) spaced out every so often .... there's no way around this **.
Your spacing can only be so tight.
For bench, the rack does not come with the platform area in front of the rack.
For bench press (where you could make use of the safeties) you are going to have to build-out the deck area infront the rack
so the legs of your bench are at the right elevation. Or use a plate or plinth to shim up the bench a few inches ....
....but then your feet?
For deadlift ... For most normal racks, out of the box, I could deadlift inside of.
Say you were short on room in your garage or something
The integral platform inside of the Rip rack, you would have to (again) buildup up the platform on either side to deadlift inside of it.
I guess most people would do the 8' wide x 4' deep buildout in front of the rack because with the Rip rack you are forced into that
.... but some people do deadlift inside their racks.
It comes fully welded I think, or at least in large units.
Good luck moving it around (old house to new house; shipping costs; etc)
From an Olympic Weightlifting point of view, the Rip rack looks pretty beefy ....so what comes to mind is jerk supports or jerk recoveries.... but the way that internal platform is, I think one would almost have to build up (floor risers) in front of, AND behind .... IOW: I don't think you'd have the room to split front to back in there.
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** lolz, could do the staggered holes like a Pioneer belt, but the 4" channel would complicated that (maybe). IDK.