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Thread: Using 1" diameter all-solid barbell (with 1" diameter holed plates)

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2021
    Posts
    4

    Default Using 1" diameter all-solid barbell (with 1" diameter holed plates)

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    I'm trying to do deadlifts, squats and benchpressing in an apartment. The loudest thing about my lifts is the clankle of the metal when I deadlift. If I go with a all-solid 1" barbell (with a 1" diameter cylinder and weights that are made for it), what will go wrong? Those cheaper weight sets at department stores should have less clankle. I know some trainers don't care for cheap equipment, but I do not see what is wrong with them.

    One option I was considering was using cloth tape around a standard barbell (with a wider diameter cylinder where the weights sit). But I think using cloth tape would make the weights not slide on or slide off easily. I need to keep the clanking noise of the metal at a minimum to not bother my neighbors.

    Before I spend the money, I am hoping someone can tell me why those 1" barbells that you never see at commercial gyms may not work. I lift less than 200 pounds, so the plates rattling with the bar are my main concern for the noise. No one is beneath me in the complex.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    133

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by todd_h View Post
    I'm trying to do deadlifts, squats and benchpressing in an apartment. The loudest thing about my lifts is the clankle of the metal when I deadlift. If I go with a all-solid 1" barbell (with a 1" diameter cylinder and weights that are made for it), what will go wrong? Those cheaper weight sets at department stores should have less clankle. I know some trainers don't care for cheap equipment, but I do not see what is wrong with them.

    One option I was considering was using cloth tape around a standard barbell (with a wider diameter cylinder where the weights sit). But I think using cloth tape would make the weights not slide on or slide off easily. I need to keep the clanking noise of the metal at a minimum to not bother my neighbors.

    Before I spend the money, I am hoping someone can tell me why those 1" barbells that you never see at commercial gyms may not work. I lift less than 200 pounds, so the plates rattling with the bar are my main concern for the noise. No one is beneath me in the complex.
    They will bend and are low quality.

    Either buy the real deal used or join a gym. You can build a platform and there are some pads you can get to blunt the noise of the deadlift. A 200 lbs deadlift is something you should hit in your first month of LP unless you are very old or some other special population.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2021
    Location
    Winter Springs, FL
    Posts
    159

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by todd_h View Post
    I'm trying to do deadlifts, squats and benchpressing in an apartment. The loudest thing about my lifts is the clankle of the metal when I deadlift. If I go with a all-solid 1" barbell (with a 1" diameter cylinder and weights that are made for it), what will go wrong? Those cheaper weight sets at department stores should have less clankle. I know some trainers don't care for cheap equipment, but I do not see what is wrong with them.

    One option I was considering was using cloth tape around a standard barbell (with a wider diameter cylinder where the weights sit). But I think using cloth tape would make the weights not slide on or slide off easily. I need to keep the clanking noise of the metal at a minimum to not bother my neighbors.

    Before I spend the money, I am hoping someone can tell me why those 1" barbells that you never see at commercial gyms may not work. I lift less than 200 pounds, so the plates rattling with the bar are my main concern for the noise. No one is beneath me in the complex.
    If you do the lift as prescribed in the blue book, the weights will make no noise whatsoever coming off the floor as you will have pulled all of the slack out of the barbell. They will make plenty of noise as you return the weights to the ground and there's really not much you can do to avoid it. If you want to minimize noise, use crumb rubber bumper plates. That's the best you can do.

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