The treadmill was born of man's desire to keep his lazy carcass in shape when the elements won't permit. Then came the stair-stepper and elliptical, machines born of man's desire to keep from ripping his knees to shreds on the treadmill.
The Bowflex Max Trainer M5 is about 70 percent stair-stepper, 25 percent elliptical, and five percent torture—but mostly in a good way. It's definitely one of the most attractive home-exercise machines you'll ever see, and there's no question it can give you a solid workout. Plus, it's smartphone-savvy, syncing your workouts to a tracking app or Apple's Health Kit. But certain aspects of the design will leave you wondering if anyone at Bowflex actually tested the machine before sending the CAD files to the factory.
It's definitely a beaut, a monolithic slab of arms and pistons decked out with striking red trim and what looks like a jet turbine at its base. Turns out it's a fan—one that produces less noise than a jet, but definitely drowns out the TV as you pedal faster.
That's once you get it assembled, of course. Conveniently labeled parts and a well-written manual make for a fairly painless build, but it's gonna take an hour, minimum. When you're done, you can stick it nearly anywhere thanks to its measly 46-inch-long footprint. But you'll have to hug a wall unless you run an extension cord to the M5's annoyingly short power cord.
Climbing atop the machine feels like, well, climbing atop a machine. At either pedal's apex, you're a good 15 inches from the floor. Bowflex supplies admirably large steppers, but I found the machine difficult to get started unless I leaned heavily on the outer edge of the highest one. Motors control the resistance, but not the motion, so there's no startup assist.
