Planning to get a custom station made soon. Your dip/pull up station is insanely great looking. I decided to add on a base frame to the front on mines to add two barbell rack V holders about 2 feet off the ground for dead lifts and rack pulls (as I have lower back injuries..don't want to dead lift weight from the ground all the time)
@@MattLees-Nunan Hey Matt..finally got around to getting my Rack built I told you a couple months ago. I sent the photo to you on insta for FYI :) It's basic stuff but it will do the job by having small footprint and it also acts as a storage unit for plates and barbells! PS. I am not building it tho..sent it to a shop and still saving lots of money ;)
I think your videos are great, I even took me from you Do you have an idea how I can make "Skierg Concepr2" together It is good for conditioning training Greetings from Germany
One millimeter is approximately equal to 0.0394 inches. There are 25.4 millimeters in an inch. To convert millimeters into inches, divide the length in millimeters by 25.4. Hope this helps!
good thing for a couple of months maybe. For a long term heavy weights dips and pull ups this design wont have a chance due to basic physics principles. I feel like in North America people really have problems with common sense , everything is made not to last...
this is exactly how oldskool dip and pullup station looked like in my old gy. and this was exactly what I was looking for.
Brilliant! I'm glad to hear it's what you're after😊
I think I might build this!
Good luck with the construction😊
@@MattLees-NunanThanks
Nice vid ! Thnx got the details and omw to Bunnings 😅
Nice saw brother. Nice pull up station as well.
Thank you! You have a makita saw too?
Yes. Love the cordless Mikita saw. And all the other makita tools I got too. Thank you for the videos also.
Makita are awesome! Thanks mate😁
Planning to get a custom station made soon. Your dip/pull up station is insanely great looking. I decided to add on a base frame to the front on mines to add two barbell rack V holders about 2 feet off the ground for dead lifts and rack pulls (as I have lower back injuries..don't want to dead lift weight from the ground all the time)
That's awesome do you have a photo you can send me on instagram? Would love to see it😍 @mattnunan
@@MattLees-Nunan I only have a sketch I did on word but I will see if I can send it as a photo ;)
@@MattLees-Nunan Hey Matt..finally got around to getting my Rack built I told you a couple months ago. I sent the photo to you on insta for FYI :) It's basic stuff but it will do the job by having small footprint and it also acts as a storage unit for plates and barbells! PS. I am not building it tho..sent it to a shop and still saving lots of money ;)
That's great! Love the dedication😊
This is great.
Thanks, I'm glad you like it😊
you are good
Thank you! So are you!😊
Cool
I think your videos are great, I even took me from you
Do you have an idea how I can make "Skierg Concepr2" together
It is good for conditioning training
Greetings from Germany
Hey mate!😊
Thank you so much. I really appreciate that🙏
I have seen the Skierg Concept 2 and I'm sure it wouldn't be too difficult to put together🤔
Is that strong ? 😃 Looking very good !
It sure is! Thank you😊
Hello do you know how to make an assisted station pull up chin up dip thank you
Hello! Hmmmm...No I don't but maybe this is something you could create and share it with the IsoGym community?😊
Keep going
THANK YOU😊
A man love what you doing can you give me the exact measurements
Thank you😊 I will put together a material list and put it in the description over the next couple of days👍
I've now put together a materials and fixings list in the description. I hope this helps!😊👍
@@MattLees-Nunan Thanks man you are one creative brother 💪🛠️
@@lamarmorgan9937 Thanks brother! Let me know if you need any more help😊
legs press behind you looks tough
Haha would you like to make one?😁
Can someone translate these measurements into America wtf is a kilometer 🦅🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸
One millimeter is approximately equal to 0.0394 inches. There are 25.4 millimeters in an inch. To convert millimeters into inches, divide the length in millimeters by 25.4. Hope this helps!
can someone without a brain build this you think?
Hmmmm...Only one way to find out😆
good thing for a couple of months maybe. For a long term heavy weights dips and pull ups this design wont have a chance due to basic physics principles. I feel like in North America people really have problems with common sense , everything is made not to last...
Yeah, well this is lasting for years my friend! No doubt about it...she's built tough💪🙌😊