I supply a wide range of kettle bells:
| Weight | Price |
|
|---|---|---|
| 6KG | £24.95 | |
| 8KG | £29.95 | |
| 12KG | £39.95 | |
| 16KG | £49.95 | |
| 20KG | £59.95 | |
| 24KG | £69.95 | |
| 28KG | £79.95 | |
| 32KG | £89.95 | |
| 36KG | £99.95 |
Please contact me for orders and enquiries; including prices for larger kettlebells.
Countries are going bankrupt; the world is in turmoil no mortgages, no pensions. Gloom and despondency everywhere.
Why is this on a kettle bell site I hear you asking. What has prompted me to write this? Well I must confess it's because of the state of cheap kettle bells I have seen recently. Kettle bells are becoming main stream and like every new piece of kit on the block everyone wants a piece of the action, which I am told is called an open market and I have no problem with that, but I implore you to buy your kettle bells off people who know how to use them and have put some time into understanding their product and it’s uses, and can back up their sales with knowledge and training. No one walks away with a kettle bell that they have purchased off myself without being able to use it correctly.
Don’t get me wrong I love a bargain, but it’s only a bargain to me if what I buy is useful and I can use it for what I want and I have made a genuine saving. I recently saw some kettle bells that cost wise appeared to be good value, then I examined the said kettle bells and started to laugh, the store owner asked me what I was laughing at, to which I replied, “the casting is very rough and there is a ridge around the bell and handle that will murder someone’s hand during a set of swings”.
The guy knew nothing about kettle bells so did not know the design of the bell would be a problem, this leads me onto another claim I have seen recently, where the guy selling them stated that it was beneficial to have a smaller gap between the handle of the bell and the bell. I would argue that you have to have sufficient space between the bell handle and the bell body so both clear the bones of the wrists.
I have seen statements that state hollow kettle bells are superior to cast one’s, sorry my friend all kettle bells are cast. Some are hollow (competition bells, please buy them if you are entering competitions) and some solid, but stating solid ones are inferior because they are solid absolutely makes no sense to me. Surely it is the quality of the actually casting that counts.
Buy the best kettle bells you can afford get some quality training (don’t start me on that one!) and use the bell to your best advantage and enjoy a healthy lifestyle.
| Created by: | www.ws4sb.com | |
| Updated on: | 16/12/07 | |
| Copyright © (2007) | West Midlands Kettlebells |