completely agree with you re: safety and benching alone at home. I don't think I could use the squat stands that were posted above for that reason.
See my reply to jezzmo.
cannibal.horse, you changed your mind pretty quickly re: power racks! in the space of 1 day? what made you re-think power racks? the thing is, I *DON'T* always know what I'm doing re: bench press, I'm starting out and still not sure of my limits so there is a chance of failing when I least expect it. hence the need for the safety features.
What made me rethink power racks is that though they have 4 advantages (create a degree of safety, allow for partial movements, are stable and have a variety of useful accessories), for most people these advantages don't make up for the space they take up.
A powerrack is going to require a lot of space - a room of 8'x10' or in garage terms one car space. For most people living with mum and dad or off with the boyfriend this is a big ask.
A squat stand is much cheaper, more spacious and portable. It can be shifted away to allow a car in, moved for your brother's band practice or taken to a parking lot so you can crank DMX and lift free weights for the ladies (if that's your thing) which makes them much more user friendly.
Certainly there is a slightly larger chance of injury in the squat (depending on your leverage) and bench, but anyone past the absolute raw novice stage will know their body well enough not to pick a weight to heavy or force a rep too far (remember these movements use a lot of musculature so your brain is getting a lot of feedback).
This is something I love to do and want to do long term, and part of life is that one day I'll have a wife who'll want to control my recreation time and children who won't know it exists. Being able to slide my gear against a garage wall is going to create far fewer arguments than a 200kg muscle motion power rack.
Btw: my power rack reply was months ago
I'm aware that I just won't be able to lift as heavy as them. Can't see myself benching or squatting > 100kgs so I can probably get away with a power rack with less load rating.
You'll probably break 100kg for the squat if you're serious. That's enough to give a cheap rack the shakes. Plus, you might get a boyfriend?
That's true I might revise my need for a lat tower. Chinups are enough (and there are still pull-ups which I can't yet do!)
Try kipping pull ups or better yet jump from the ground!
jezzmo, veeery nice setup! can't believe you ordered 180 kgs of weights, gosh, are you into powerlifting? I'm just starting out with weights, just following Stronglifts so far.
I don't mean to steal jezzmo's steam, but a serious male lifter should have a deadlift somewhere between 300-350kg. Dat's a lot of weight
Kate, I'd generally advise you to spend $50 more and get the Muscle Motion Power Rack - I'm a strong believer in quality over anything else, and though it has less features and its poundage rating might seem overkill it looks like a far more sturdy rack.
Btw guys don't forget to buy microplates, that has been my biggest regret in weightlifting.