February 24, 2009

Ab Coaster versus Hanging Leg Raise

The revolutionary Ab Coaster utilizes the same motion as the very difficult Hanging Leg Raise exercise. The Ab Coaster uses this very effective motion while IMPROVING this traditional exercise.

But don't take our word for it.

Here is a Product Review of the AB COASTER from a professional fitness magazine, which states that the Ab Coaster is actually BETTER than the Hanging Leg Raise.

Reprinted from FLEX MAGAZINE, November 2008, page 74.


TRAINING TOOLS: RIDING THE AB COASTER
By: Sean Perine

Yeah, yeah, you’ve seen ‘em all, from the Abdominator to the AbSolution, on those restless nights when the TV was the last ditch cure for your insomnia. In late-night infomercials, you’ve heard the exultant promises of perfectly coifed fitness models with their sculpted midsections and wondered who was actually gullible enough to buy this, the latest abserciser of the week?

So have I, and yet here I find myself giving enthusiastic approval for the latest, much to my surprise. It’s called the Ab Coaster, and I had the opportunity to give it a test drive at this year’s Health+Fitness Business Expo in Denver, CO.

The machine resembles what you might expect a hovercycle to look like when they started building them. The best way to describe it is as a cross between a leg curl machine and a seated crunch device. However, this little gem works your abs like nothing else I’ve ever used before in over 25 years of training.

The Ab Coaster’s movement is pretty much a hybrid, somewhere between a hanging leg raise and a crunch. You pull leg pads along an armature that resembles a leg raise, but the track’s curve avoids the straight back syndrome that often plagues the exercise, curling your torso inward, as in a crunch. The result is a unique movement that hits every inch of your midsection. The leg pad can also be adjusted to allow for asymmetrical pulling, which is great for oblique work.