Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Price Comparisons Smooth Fitness CE-7.4 Elliptical Trainer

Smooth Fitness CE-7.4 Elliptical Trainer
Smooth Fitness CE-7.4 Elliptical Trainer Review
Product CodeB000ER385S
Product Rating
Price$1,486.00
Where To BuySee More Details
Customer ReviewSee More Reviews

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #221630 in Sports & Outdoors
  • Color: Black
  • Brand: Smooth
  • Model: SME-CE-74
  • Released on: 2011-02-14
  • Dimensions: 67.00" h x
    27.00" w x
    83.00" l,
    210.00 pounds

Features

  • 21-inch stride length is comfortable for multiple users of varying heights
  • Ergonomic, pivoting foot pedals emulate the natural motion of your ankle as the pivoting foot pedal maintains proper alignment
  • Wireless heart rate monitor is included; automatically adjust the intensity of your workouts to reach your optimal fat burning zone
  • Deluxe four-window, dot matrix LED display allows you to easily read course profiles and track your RPM, speed, watts, time, distance, pulse, heart rate, calories, resistance level, metabolic equivalents, and target heart rate while working out
  • Warranty information: lifetime on the frame and braking system; three years on all other parts; one year on labor
  • 21-inch stride length is comfortable for multiple users of varying heights
  • Ergonomic, pivoting foot pedals emulate the natural motion of your ankle as the pivoting foot pedal maintains proper alignment
  • Wireless heart rate monitor is included; automatically adjust the intensity of your workouts to reach your optimal fat burning zone
  • Deluxe four-window, dot matrix LED display allows you to easily read course profiles and track your RPM, speed, watts, time, distance, pulse, heart rate, calories, resistance level, metabolic equivalents, and target heart rate while working out
  • Warranty information: lifetime on the frame and braking system; three years on all other parts; one year on labor

Product Description

Health club workout in a residential elliptical The Smooth CE 7.4 Elliptical Trainer provides a gym quality workout in your home at an unbeatable value. This elliptical trainer includes ergonomic, pivoting foot pedals, a heavy-duty flywheel, a long 21" stride, LED display, 13 challenging programs & tilt-and-go wheels. Ergonomic, Pivoting Foot Pedal - The goal is to keep you strong and healthy so you can keep getting stronger and healthier. Our ergonomic pivoting foot pedal on the Smooth 7.4 elliptical mimics your body's natural motion and keeps your lower body in alignment. That means we're keeping your ankles, knees, and hips from suffering impact and strain LED Display - Look and learn. iPod Docking Station with Speakers - The iPod docking station on the Smooth 7.4 elliptical allows you to listen to your favorite music through the built in speakers. Ergonomic, Pivoting Foot Pedal - Emulating the orthopedic movement of your ankle, the pivoting foot pedal supports your heel while allowing your ankle to assume its most functional position throughout the entire elliptical cycle. Proper alignment prevents your ankle, knee and hip from suffering impact. Heavy Duty Flywheel - The elimination of rollers also eliminates the aggravating "bump" sometimes felt with other elliptical machines. With a heavy duty flywheel, the CE 7.4 has a noticeably smoother ride than other ellipticals. Magnetic Braking SystemSet your preferred heart rate, strap on the chest monitor and the resistance of your routines will automatically be adjusted as your heart rate changes. LED Display - With a four-window, dot matrix LED display, you can easily read course profiles, RPM, speed, watts, time, distance, pulse, heart rate, calories, resistance level, metabolic equivalents and target heart rate. 13 Challenging Preset Exercise Programs.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

195 of 211 people found the following review helpful.
4Smooth machine, rough sell
By J. D. Carlo
Abstract:So far this has been a big, solid and pretty fun-to-use machine at a relatively good price. DO NOT take any deals on used equipment offered by Smooth. A 10% discount is too small to justify the potential headaches. I had major problems with the purchase and initial mechanical failure of a used machine, which cannot be returned for refund.Article:I relied heavily on reviews like this one when I decided to buy my first elliptical trainer -- in fact my first exercise machine of any type -- so I'm hoping to return the favor.When I started my search, I was drawn to the brand names I had seen in the gym, namely Life Fitness and Precor. I loved the way the gym elliptical got my heart rate up and my body moving without the pounding to my (overweight and out of shape) body I got on a treadmill. I was addicted.I knew the machines were expensive, but was still not prepared for the sticker shock when I saw what even used Life Fitness machines cost - between 3 and 5K. At the same time, I knew for sure I wanted the feeling of gliding almost weightless on a big sturdy machine, not cranking on a man-sized eggbeater from Wal-Mart.After some searching I came across Smooth. The consumer and trade-publication reviews I read were very positive in terms of the construction and design of the machine and by extension the quality of the workout. In choosing the non-consumer reviews I relied on (or put differently, avoiding scam reviews that might have been somehow 'influenced') I sought sites that immediately acknowledged the industry leaders I had been priced out of - Life Fitness and Precor in particular. If a review began by saying "Life Fitness is the absolute best you can get - IF you can afford it", and *then* went on to praise another brand on its cost/quality merits, I figured I was in the right place.Smooth Fitness was generally well-liked by these reviewers; they were also generally pretty adamant about the fact that buying an elliptical machine priced less than $500 dollars was at best a gamble, at worst a rip. The better idea, they said, was to sink that money in a long-term investment (ie pony up the bigger bucks). I weigh 220 pounds and like to jump around on the pedals while listening to 200 bpm techno -- something made of plastic wasn't going to cut it. So I took their advice and chose to 'invest'.The reviews I read kept coming back to one theme with the Smooth brand: machines that aimed for gym-quality construction based on sound design principles, offered at consumer-level prices, between $1000 and $2000. They said Smooth was an online-only vendor selling directly to the consumer, which in principle is one thing that allowed for the lower prices (as opposed to, say, cheap materials or shoddy workmanship). Since that initial research I learned that - if I understand correctly - Smooth machines are also sold under another brand name through more traditional outlets such as actual retail stores. I believe the other brand is 'EVO', and that the machines appear to be identical, just with different stickers on them. More about this in a minute...All of this appealed to me - I was willing to pay twice as much or more for a studly machine that would last 10 years as opposed to 10 months. I'm a young-ish consumer who isn't afraid to conduct business over the internet, and the positive sense I got of the Smooth machines seems to have outweighed my natural desire to try a thing out before buying. It was at this point that I tried filling the experience-gap with actual consumer reviews, and started learning about the scatter-plot effect of unsolicited reviews...Mostly people said it was a decent machine that ran well at the right price. But there were weird spikes in the data - one guy was homicidally furious about bad customer service and a machine that didn't work. One guy said he had turned the resistance all the way up and it still was pretty easy. A woman complained that her stance on the machine was giving her knee trouble. Ultimately I looked for the median in all this, and it seemed positive. Being an impulse-buyer, I was on the phone a short time later.And this is where the one down side - and a pretty big one frankly - to the purchasing experience began. I got on the phone with a salesman. By which I mean a guy who wanted to sell me something - specifically something more expensive than what I was trying to buy to begin with. The story:At the time of my purchase (January 2008), there were three levels of Smooth trainer that seemed potentially right for me: the CE 2.1, CE 3.2 and the CE 7.4. As the naming system implies, these are all in roughly the same family, with a higher number meaning a more robust machine. As the numbering implies, the 2.1 and 3.2 are very similar, with the jump to 7.4 being a bigger step up. You can read all about these machines at http://www.smoothfitness.com/ellipticals-machines/index.htmAs I said, I'm overweight and out of shape. You don't get that way being the kind of person who just has to get some exercise every day. Sure, I was jonesing for that good elliptical rush and wanted to be able to roll out of bed and get it without the struggle of getting to the gym. You can see that I live in constant oscillation between compulsion and sloth. I was sufficiently self-aware to acknowledge in the end that I was not likely to be on this thing every day, no matter how much I wanted to believe I would be. In any case, the top-end 7.4 was rated by the company as potentially able to endure use by multiple people on a daily basis (ie gym-level consumption), and by all known laws of physics I could not actually become multiple people. Also I live alone. So logic dictated that even a greedy feature-hungry guy like me should save the roughly $500 and go with the mid-range 3.2.A note here about Smooth's pricing. I don't really fault them for it, but they use the term 'sale price' as though the machine were actually 'on sale', implying the price could go back up in the near future. This isn't really the case - just my experience based on roughly 8 months now of having periodically checked their pricing on these three machines. Since the winter of 2007 the prices have been pretty stable: both the 2.1 and the 3.2 hover at $1500 - the price difference being so small I wonder if anyone would buy the 2.1. The 7.4 is steady at $2000.A note about 2.1 vs. 3.2. From what I can tell, these are the same machine, but with the 3.2 having a more sophisticated and feature-rich control panel. These things are very modular I've learned - I could walk over right now and in 30 seconds completely detach my control panel from the machine. In fact, my understanding is that the panels only have one fundamental interaction with the actual machinery, which is varying the current flowing to the electromagnet that controls resistance. You could (and I did experimentally) run all you want on the machine with no control panel hooked up, it just will be at the no-resistance level. Of course the panels do other important things like monitoring your speed, theoretical distance travelled, pulse rate (on some machines), but none of these things is properly mechanical. In fact, one of the things recommending the Smooth machines is that they operate on a very simple physical principle - in terms of the complexity of the machinery there's really not much to them. This is a good thing it turns out - it means less opportunity for things to go wrong, better performance and longevity.You learn a lot about the machines when you buy Smooth, because you assemble them yourself, which also can mean troubleshooting your new purchase yourself...So as I was saying, I had settled on the mid-range 3.2 when I got on the phone with Keith B., sales consultant. Keith upsold me, and I can't blame him for it, it's his job, and I'm a big boy who knows how to say 'No'. But I mention it because I didn't see actual salesmanly behavior coming from an internet-only operation, and it might catch you off guard as well.As I said, Keith upsold me, and did it by appealing to my greed -- he informed me that for just $300 more I could get a used version of the illustrious 7.4 - that's a 10% discount. I'm the son of a salesman, and on the hard-sell scale I'd say Keith was at about a 5 (1 being apathetic McDonald's workers, 10 being a used car salesman), he wanted me to make the deal. And folks, deep in my heart I wanted the big boy, even though I had rationally made the conscious decision to be moderate, my primal urge was to get the biggest most expensive thing they had, and I did.And frankly, for a 10% discount, the subsequent head and heartaches were just not worth it. I would have been better off spending the extra $200 and just buying the brand new 7.4. I'm going to be bold and tell you to refuse the offer I got if it is made to you. See, this is how I learned that the Smooth is also offered as "EVO" through the more traditional supply chain, because what I bought was some kind of store model or otherwise recycled EVO-branded 7.4 (I wasn't able to learn the actual story of the machine I bought - there were multiple used ones for sale). You can see where the EVO stickers used to be.The deal I got was that the machine was covered by the same 5-year warranty as any other 7.4, *but* I waived right to the usual no-questions-asked return policy. I should mention that the warranty on these machines was another big selling point - 5 years on anything fundamental to the machine is a pretty good deal, better than you get on some cars, and is Hyundaiesque in how far it exceeds competitor's offers.Anyway, the company operates out of King of Prussia, PA, two hours up the road from me, and I figured if anything went seriously wrong I could load the machine up in my Oldsmobile, drive up there, and throttle them with one of the swing-arms if necessary. Keith and I did the deal.There were some unnecessary shipping headaches after that which Smooth (specifically Keith) could have prevented. The machines are shipped by 3rd-party trucking companies. Keith was supposed to send me a document indicating when and how I could expect to take delivery of the machine, which he failed to do. I eventually called Smooth (and got the other salesperson), asking for the documentation, but what I was sent still didn't include the shipping info. Instead I got a voice mail from a trucker parked outside my apartment saying "I guess I'll take the crate back to the terminal..." I had to look the shipper up on the internet -- based on the guy on voicemail saying "This is Kenny from Blahblah Shippers..." -- find a workable phone number for the local depot, and make my own arrangements for the drop off.So I took delivery of the machine, which I'm here to tell you is HUGE. I have carried a lot of furniture in my time, but the back half of the 7.4 - the business end - seriously nearly herniated me and another young dude who was helping me. It didn't help that I live on the second floor of an old building with a ridiculous winding staircase. We cracked part of the plastic covering in the course of our epic struggle to round the last corner. To this day I wonder how I'm going to get the thing out when I move.But that was the point, after all, a big sturdy machine. And although the plastic covering I mentioned is kind of ridiculously fragile by comparison, the rest of the machine would probably survive a vigorous mortar attack. A hopped up John Belushi could run the Boston marathon on this thing and never shake it an inch. It's all welded, no screws, nothing that isn't supposed to be a moving part that might work loose or start to rattle. On this point, thumbs up.But my friends, after all this excitement, and a relatively uneventful assembly (note: have a partner, solo assembly efforts almost resulted in hernia #2 of the night), here was the crusher: It didn't work. As I said there's not much that can mechanically go wrong with these things, but when I tried rotating the 'legs' all I got was a sickening grinding noise. I was p.o.'d, to say the least.I removed the dainty plastic covering to discover that somehow the flywheel was misaligned such that it was grinding on the housing of the electromagnet controlling resistance. The more I played with it the worse things got to the point where it wouldn't even rotate any more and there was a fine dust of metal shavings forming on the works.After seeking emergency counseling for retail rage I contacted Smooth. Gotta say, Keith didn't sound too interested (shame on you Keith), but fortunately he quickly dumped me to the man in charge of service. Now, after slagging Keith mercilessly, I should really go on record about how great the service guy I dealt with was - his name is George. George was ready and willing to ship any spare parts that were needed, and scheduled one of the third-party service techs Smooth uses for field maintenance to come to the house. The one big drag was that getting the service tech to my house took more than a week b/c he works a multi-state area solo.The service tech, Chris from Atlantic Fitness, was great, and much to my relief, was able to fix the problem. Since his visit, the machine has had no mechanical difficulties - not even a squeak folks. One minor downside: Because the plastic on the aforementioned wheel mechanism covering is cheap and flimsy, Chris just wasn't able to make the two halves join up again quite flush or get all the screws to take/seat properly.So Chris, and by extension George, saved the day. But they couldn't remove entirely the sense that this didn't need to have been so hard. I mean, you can imagine the alternating rage and buyer's remorse I experienced in the intervening two weeks from delivery to Chris' arrival, and here was my internal story of woe:1. I took the upsell deal on the used machine, a deal I rationally knew I should have refused, and spent $300 more than I planned.2. Smooth screwed up the communications on shipping, causing me headache #1.3. On arrival, the used machine has a catastrophic mechanical failure. It is useless other than as a coat rack.4. The machine cannot be returned for a refund because of the used equipment deal I agreed to!5. I have purchased a $2000 coat rack.If the machine hadn't operated so well in the last six months, I would add that no matter how well fixed, any machine that has had a problem of this sort must be more likely to suffer further problems, making me a sucker even if it works in the short term. We'll see how it's doing in a year or 5 years from now when the warranty runs out.So that's my story. Since January, the machine has gotten, I'll admit it, 'light' use. My enthusiasm took a while to recover from the stress of the initial purchase. But today the elliptical is my friend. All the more nutty stories I read on the web have proven to be non-factors. I can't imagine someone turning up the resistance to max on this thing and doing a full workout if they aren't some sort of mountaineer. The stance is good - no knee trouble or whatever. The stride is long and feels good for an average six-foot tall guy. The cheap plastic wheel cover is only there to shelter the rear assembly, and hasn't like fallen apart or started creaking or anything.The only thing that took some getting used to are the unique-to-Smooth pivoting foot pedals. Ultimately I think they're a plus, it makes sense that some rotation at the ankle joint is needed to create a more natural stride. At first it felt kind of goofy - but that's one reason I waited this long to write a review.Hope this helps.

50 of 51 people found the following review helpful.
4Great Purchase
By Ben Kaplan
I've had the Smooth CE 7.4 Elliptical for about two months now and I love it. This machine stacks up very nicely to the expensive ellipticals I've used at the gym. Here are some pros and cons:PROS* It's very smooth! I'm not going to pretend I like working out, but the smoothness of this machine makes it a little more enjoyable. It's very easy on the joints and you get a full body workout. The g/f and others have noticed my more-defined arms recently, and it's all from the elliptical! If you use this thing regularly and push yourself, you will have a healthy heart and feel great. I really work up a sweat when I use it, but the impact on my body is low.* Set up was pretty straight-forward. Don't get me wrong, it's no cake walk, but Smooth couldn't sell it so cheaply and at such high quality unless it makes the parts separately and has the customer put it together. It took me about a day to put the whole thing together, but I was also futzing around and took breaks. The instructions were much better than average.* The best quality for the cheapest price. I know $2,000 doesn't sound cheap, but if you want a quality home elliptical, you've got to pay for it. Many of the more expensive brands like Precor charge much more for the same quality.* Good interface. The screen measures heart rate, distance, speed, and time. It measures a bunch of other metrics too, but I don't really care about them.* Plenty of different programs. I've only used the "Manual" program so far, but there are plenty of different options to play around with.* Comes with a wireless heartrate monitor. It's one of those elastic things made by Polar that you strap around your chest.CONS* I think the highest difficulty level should be harder. I work out on level 16 for 35 minutes -- and it's a great workout -- but 16 is the highest it goes. Level 16 should either offer much harder resistance, or the levels should go up to 20 or something.* It's big. Make no mistake: this baby is big and heavy. I'm sure it needs to be, because you can tell it's very well made and high quality, but when it first arrived -- and I saw this mammoth box sitting in my tiny living room -- I thought I made a big mistake. (I live in a 750 square foot apt.) Once I set it up and started using it, however, I got used to its footprint and realized what a great machine it is.Overall, the pros far outweigh the cons. If you're looking for the best home elliptical machine and have the money, the patience to do a long-ish set up, and the space, this is the one for you!

41 of 43 people found the following review helpful.
5Solid, Smooth & Quiet
By T. L. Colby
I've had this unit for about 3 months and so far have no regrets. Mine arrived in just under a week from the time I placed the order. There was some damage to the plastic housing around the flywheel during shipping. So, I took a couple digital photos before even unpacking it & sent them to customer service. They responded the same day and sent replacement parts that arrived a couple days later. I use it for 30 minutes a day nearly everyday. Despite earlier reviews warning this may not be a good fit for smaller people, I'm a 5'5" male and find it to be very comfortable. I personally wouldn't want the stride any shorter - however, I am also a runner so that may make some difference. I haven't played around much with the various programs because I'm content to set it to the resistance level I'm comfortable with and go. Sometimes I'll manually change it up or down during a workout depending on how I feel on a given day. My only con: I do occasionally notice a ticking noise, but overall it's extremely quiet, smooth and stable. No problem hearing the TV while using it. I highly recommend this machine. Just be aware of the large size of it and measure out where you plan to put it ahead of time so you know it'll fit!

See all 90 customer reviews...



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