Exercise Equipment Assembly
You bought it. You want to use it. I'll put it together โ leveled, balanced, and ready to go.
What I Assemble
- Treadmills (folding, non-folding, incline-capable)
- Ellipticals and stair climbers
- Peloton bikes (Bike and Bike+) and Peloton Tread
- Stationary bikes (spin bikes, recumbent bikes)
- Rowing machines
- Squat racks and power cages
- Functional trainers and cable machines
- Adjustable benches, weight racks, and dumbbell storage
- Mirror Home Gym, Tonal, and other "smart" home gym systems
Why It Matters Who Assembles It
Exercise equipment is heavy, has tight tolerances, and runs through hundreds of repetitions a week. If a treadmill belt isn't tracking straight because the deck wasn't leveled at install, you'll either burn out a motor or shred the belt. If a squat rack's bolts aren't fully torqued, the cage develops wobble that you absolutely don't want when you're under a loaded barbell. The assembly isn't where you save money.
I bring torque wrenches, levels, and the patience to read manuals carefully. Most home-gym manufacturers spec specific torque values โ I follow them. For Peloton and other smart equipment, I do the calibration and app pairing as part of the install so you can use it the moment I leave.
Where to Place It
I'll also help you think through where the equipment goes. Heavy racks and platforms shouldn't sit on a wood-frame floor without thought โ sometimes a mat is enough, sometimes the equipment needs to be over a load-bearing wall. For garage gyms, I'll check that the floor and door clearances work for what you bought. Better to figure that out before the boxes are opened.