Bh fitness LK 580 User Manual

OWNER’S MANUAL
Important: Read all instructions carefully before using this product. Retain this owner’s manual for future reference.
BH North America | 20155 Ellipse, Foothill Ranch, California 92610 | p.949.206.0330 | f.949.206.0013 | www.bhnorthamerica.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page
Introduction 03 Warnings and Labels 04 Safety Information 05 Exercise Instruction 06 Training Guidelines 07 Workout and Stretching 11 Overview 13 Assembly Instructions 14 Console Overview 20 Console Operations 21 Exploded View Drawing 27 Parts List 28 Warranty 29
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations on your purchase of BH Fitness equipment. We hope you appreciate the style, quality, and value that exercisers around the world have come to expect from BH Fitness.
If you have any questions, concerns or product issues, please call our Customer Service Team at 1-866-325-2339 or email us at CustomerSupport@BHNorthAmerica.com.
Carefully read through the instructions contained in this manual. ey provide you with important information about assembly, safety, tness and use of the vibration machine. Please read ALL the safety information contained in the following pages.
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WARNINGS AND LABELS
Keep hands and fingers clear of this area.
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SAFETY INFORMATION
PRECAUTIONS
is rower has been designed and constructed to provide maximum safety. Nevertheless, certain precautions should be taken when using exercise equipment. Read the whole manual before assembling and using the rower. Please observe the following safety precautions:
1. Keep children and pets away from this equipment at all times. DO NOT leave them unsupervised in the room where the rower is kept.
2. If you experience dizziness, nausea, chest pains or any other symptom while using this rower STOP the exercise. SEEK IMMEDIATE MEDICAL ATTENTION!
3. Use the rower on a level and solid surface. Adjust the feet for stability.
4. Do not place hand or objects in or near any openings.
5. Wear clothing suitable for doing exercise. Do not wear baggy clothing. Always wear athletic shoes when using the rower and tie the laces securely.
6. is rower must only be used for the purposes described in this manual. DO NOT use accessories that are not recommended by BH Fitness.
7. Do not place sharp objects near the rower.
8. Do not use the rower if it is not working correctly.
9. Before using the rower, thoroughly inspect the equipment for proper assembly.
10. Keep a clear perimeter of 3 feet (1 meter) around the rower before operating the equipment.
11. Use only authorized and trained technicians if a repair is needed.
12. Please follow the advice for correct training, as detailed in the Training Guidelines.
13. Use only the tools provided to assemble this rower.
14. is rower was designed for a maximum user weight of 325 lbs (148 kgs).
15. e rower can only be used by one person at a time.
16. Do not use this rower outside.
17. Do not use the rower if the main electrical cord becomes damaged or worn. Keep the main electrical cord away from hot surfaces.
Caution: Consult your doctor before beginning to use the machine or any exercise
program. Read all of the instructions before using any exercise equipment.
KEEP THESE INSTRUCTIONS SAFE FOR FUTURE USE.
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EXERCISE INSTRUCTION
Use of the r=ower oers various benets; it can improve tness, muscle tone, exibility and circulation. When used in conjunction with a calorie controlled diet, it can help you lose weight.
1. Consult your doctor before starting any exercise program. It is advisable to undergo a complete physical examination.
2. Exercise at recommended level. Do not over exert yourself.
3. If you feel any pain or discomfort, stop exercising immediately and consult your doctor.
4. Wear appropriate clothing and footwear for the exercise; do not wear baggy clothing; do not wear leather soled shoes or high heels.
5. Get on to the equipment slowly and securely.
6. Select the program or workout option that is most closely aligned with your workout interests.
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TRAINING GUIDELINES
Exercise is one of the most important factors in the overall health of an individual. Listed among its benets are:
• Increased capacity for physical work (strength endurance)
• Increased cardiovascular (heart and arteries/veins) and respiratory eciency
• Decreased risk of coronary heart disease
• Changes in body metabolism, e.g. losing weight
• Delaying the physiological eects of age
• Reduction in stress, increase in self-condence, etc.
ere are several components of physical tness and each is dened below.
STRENGTH
e capacity of a muscle to exert a force against resistance. Strength contributes to power and speed.
MUSCULAR ENDURANCE
e capacity to exert a force repeatedly over a period of time, e.g. it is the muscular endurance of your legs to carry you 10 km without stopping.
FLEXIBILITY
e range of motion of your joints. Improving exibility involves the stretching of muscles and tendons to maintain or increase suppleness, and it provides increased resistance to muscle injury or soreness.
CARDIO-RESPIRATORY ENDURANCE
e most essential component of physical tness. It is the ecient functioning of the heart and
lungs.
AEROBIC FITNESS Is an exercise of relatively low intensity and long duration, which depends primarily on the aerobic energy system. Aerobic means "with oxygen", and refers to the use of oxygen in the body's metabolic or energy-generating process. Many types of exercise are aerobic, and by denition are performed at moderate levels of intensity for extended periods of time.
ANAEROBIC TRAINING Is an exercise intense enough to trigger anaerobic metabolism. is means “without oxygen” and
is the output of energy when the oxygen supply is insucient to meet the body’s long term energy
demands. (For example, a 100 meter sprint.)
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OXYGEN UPTAKE e eort that you can exert over a prolonged period of time is limited by your ability to deliver oxygen to the working muscles. Regular vigorous exercise produces a training eect that can increase your aerobic capacity by as much as 20 to 30%. An increased VO2 Max indicates an increased ability of the heart to pump blood, of the lungs to ventilate oxygen, and of the muscles to take up oxygen.
THE TRAINING THRESHOLD is is the minimum level of exercise which is required to produce signicant improvements in any physical tness parameter.
OVERLOAD is is where you exercise above your comfort level. e intensity, duration and frequency of exercise should be above the training threshold and should be gradually increased as the body adapts to the increasing demands. As your tness level improves, the training threshold should rise. Working through your program and gradually increasing the overload factor is important.
PROGRESSION As you become more t, a higher intensity of exercise is required to create an overload and therefore provide continued improvement.
SPECIFICS Dierent forms of exercise produce dierent results. e type of exercise that is carried out is specic to the muscle groups being used and to the energy source involved. ere is little transfer of the eects of exercise, i.e. from strength training to cardiovascular tness. at is why it is important to have an exercise program tailored to your specic needs.
REVERSIBILITY If you stop exercising or do not do your program often enough, you will lose the benets you have gained. Regular workouts are the key to success.
WARM-UP Every exercise program should start with a warm-up where the body is prepared for the eort to come. It should be gentle and preferably use the muscles group to be involved later. Stretching should be included in both your warm-up and cool down, and should be performed after 3-5 minutes of low intensity aerobic activity or calisthenic type exercise.
WARM DOWN OR COOL DOWN
is involves a gradual decrease in the intensity of the exercise session. Following exercise, a large supply of blood remains in the working muscles. If it is not returned promptly to the central circulation, pooling of blood may occur in the muscles.
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HEART RATE
As you exercise, your heart beat increases. is is often used as a measure of the required intensity of an exercise. You need to exercise hard enough to condition your circulatory system, and increase your pulse rate, but not enough to strain your heart.
Your initial level of tness is important when developing an exercise program for you. When starting, you can get a good training eect with a heart rate of 110-120 beats per minute (BPM). If you are more t, you will need a higher threshold of stimulation.
To begin with, you should exercise at a level that elevates your heart rate to about 65 to 70% of your maximum. If you nd this is too easy, you may want to increase it, but it is better to lean on the conservative side.
As a rule of thumb, the maximum heart rate is 220 minus your age. As you increase in age, your
heart, like other muscles, loses some of its eciency. Some of its natural loss is won back as tness
improves. e following table is a guide to those who are “starting tness.”
Age Target Heart Rate 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 10 Second Count 23 22 22 21 20 19 19 18 18 Beats per Minute 138 132 132 126 120 114 114 108 108
PULSE COUNT
e pulse count (on your wrist or carotid artery in the neck, taken with two index ngers) is done for ten seconds, taken a few seconds after you stop exercising. is is for two reasons: (a) 10 seconds is long enough for accuracy, (b) the pulse count is to approximate your BPM rate at the time you are
exercising. Since heart rate slows as you recover, a longer count isn’t as accurate.
e target is not a magic number, but a general guide. If you’re above average with your tness, you
may work comfortably a little above that suggested for your age group. e following table is a guide.
Age Target Heart Rate 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 10 Second Count 26 26 25 24 23 22 22 21 20 Beats per Minute 156 156 150 144 138 132 132 126 120
Don’t push yourself too hard to reach the gures on this table. It can be very uncomfortable if you
over exercise. Let it happen naturally as you work through your program. Remember, the target is a guide, not a rule, a little above or below is just ne.
Two nal comments: (1) don’t be concerned with day to day variations in your pulse rate, being under pressure or not enough sleep can aect it; (2) your pulse rate is a guide, don’t become a slave
to it.
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