excited newbie wrote:Ill take your word for it mitch, but why is it bad for training? It seems to force you to use fluid motions instead of being a choppy climber. I dont know a thing about them but they seem ok.
Thanks for trusting me
Now let me try to convince you!
First of all, what dcentral meant by "there's no angle change" is that once you hop on the wall, it's a constant angle, until you hop off. The reason he says this as a negative is because when you build a bouldering wall, you want variety! He also noted that you can't traverse, downclimb, etc.. A treadmill (as for running) is *insanely* repetitive.
And that, frankly, is all the downside you need! The main obstacle to working out (as anyone who trains will attest to) is boredom, and motivation. I had a gym at my house that was pretty sizeable, and even that got insanely boring. You just lose motivation, and stop doing it.
Plus, $2000 is a load of money. You could build an awesome home gym (where you could set proper routes, and actually have fun climbing) for that much, including holds, chin up bar, etc. Man, pay me to build you a gym!
Plus, if you are learning "fluid" climbing on a treadmill.. What good does it do you? Real rock doesn't move any more than a wall. You will learn to bouldering smoothly on your own, as you improve. If the treadmill isn't moving continously (which would be ridiculous) than how is it actually any different? Can't you still stop and be choppy?
Lastly: They had one at the Pepsi Max booth in Hyde Park the other day.. and it was called
The Wall of Non-Terror, I kid you not. If that's not reason enough to convince you not to buy one, I don't know what is!