The Palm Beach Post

Home workouts get pricey upgrades

Screen-based systems replace bulky gear, if you can afford them.

- ©2018 The New York Times

Erin Griffith

Paul Wright, a smiling, impeccably jacked personal trainer, stared at me from the large screen mounted to the wall. He was waiting for me to start my next set of biceps curls.

The screen was part of a new weightlift­ing machine from Tonal, a San Francisco startup. The system combines software and an interactiv­e LED screen with electromag­netic weights and cables to create an experience that does not rely on plates, barbells and gravity. Tonal had sensed that my last set of curls was too easy, and helpfully — perhaps sadistical­ly — added more weight for the next set.

I grumbled about the weight, but realized Wright couldn’t hear me any more than Tamilee Webb could hear me griping through a “Buns of Steel” VHS tape in the 1990s. The video of him was a recording, too. But as I grimaced and sweated through the reps, I noticed they were precisely the right level of difficulty. The machine knew my strength better than I did. Tonal’s chief executive, head of marketing, public relations representa­tive and another trainer eagerly looked on.

The Tonal machine is very cool, I told them — and, at $2,995, very expensive.

Home fitness machinery, in all its bulk, was once relegated to the garage or the basement. Now, with a little help from Silicon Valley engineers, it is moving onto the wall. In recent weeks two tech startups, backed by millions of dollars of venture funding, have introduced sleek wallmounte­d fitness systems that stream workouts into their customers’ living rooms, bedrooms, dens, foyers or home offices.

Tonal began taking orders in August with plans to ship machines in September. Mirror, a fitness startup based in New York City that has $38 million in investor money, will introduce its product at a conference in San Francisco this week. The Mirror product is a wall-mounted device that streams yoga, Pilates, barre, cardio and strength workouts into a customer’s home.

They are among the first startups to pounce on the success of Peloton, a stationary bike startup that investors recently valued at $4 billion. Peloton blends the hardware of a bike with the software of a video streaming subscripti­on and the content of spin classes. Its skyrocketi­ng growth has made investors wary of missing the next big thing in fitness.

Still, all of the companies face a big unanswered question: Are enough people willing to pay premium prices to justify the giant business investment­s?

Peloton has built its company

around a $1,995 bike and a $39 monthly subscripti­on. Tonal’s system requires a $49 monthly subscripti­on on top of the $2,995 for the machine and an optional $495 in accessorie­s. Mirror’s machine is $1,495 and requires a $39 monthly subscripti­on.

There may be limits to the market for high-end home fitness equipment, particular­ly as more competitor­s rush in and copycats undercut the tech companies on price. For example, Nautilus, which makes treadmills, stationary bikes and Bowflex weight-training systems, offers apps with features like those from the tech companies without requiring a subscripti­on. (Bowflex home gyms start at $1,599.)

“Peloton has demonstrat­ed very enviable growth in the industry, but has an extremely high price point for tech that shouldn’t cost that much,” said Rommel Dionisio, an analyst at Aegis Capital who covers Nautilus.

“You can buy exercise bikes for $99 on Black Friday.”

Tonal’s and Mirror’s founders are fluent in Silicon Valley’s grandiose language of changing the world, a requiremen­t for raising large sums of venture capital.

“We didn’t just take a weight machine and stick a sensor on it,” Aly Orady, Tonal’s chief executive, said. “We’re fundamenta­lly reinventin­g strength training.”

Brynn Putnam, founder and chief executive of Mirror, said fitness was the first of many uses for Mirror’s technology. The screen, she said, could eventually offer interactiv­e media on fashion, beauty or meditation.

“We’re looking to be the next screen in people’s lives,” she said. “We desire to be an immersive platform, not just a piece of gym equipment.”

Both wall gyms are hoping that various forms of digital engagement — progress reports, virtual “highfives” and encouragem­ent from instructor­s — will keep exercisers coming back.

If that doesn’t work, the guilt from their credit card bills may do the trick.

But the technology doesn’t overcome some long-standing problems with home fitness systems. There is no instructor in the room to correct poor form when lifting heavy weights or doing tricky yoga poses.

Tonal’s practice of automatica­lly assigning weights based on performanc­e and encouragin­g exercisers to push their limits is both convenient and motivating — but could also be dangerous. The machine’s handles have buttons that release the weights, as well as an option for “spotting,” which will reduce the load if the machine senses it is too difficult.

Mirror’s screen gives exercisers cues to work harder or ease off based on their heart rate, while offering workout options tailored to a person’s injuries or pregnancy. Mirror also has the option for one-on-one training sessions, which use the device’s camera, for an extra $40 to $75.

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