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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.

Equipment Sitting in the Garage?

Tell me what you bought and where you want it โ€” I'll get back to you.