Carl Watts wrote: ↑September 5th, 2023, 2:53 am
Look overall and for the price I think they are very good. The IP in the monitor is exceptional.
As a person who has been building an Open Source alternative for the PM5 for a coupe of years, I am actually deeply impressed by C2's work. We use a Raspberry Pi 4 in its high performance mode (all 4 cores on maximum speed, some processes on a dedicated core, some subprocesses run on near-kernel priority, etc.), and still there are some tricks the PM5 can do we can't. With much simpler hardware. Drawing the force curve live on screen overloads our CPU, while the PM5 just does it without issue.
Carl Watts wrote: ↑September 5th, 2023, 2:53 am
I compare the C2 Erg to the typical home treadmill, which I have worked on and repaired the boards on and for a similar price they are total rubbish and you would NEVER put one of those in a Gym. So you want to buy a decent Gym treadmill for home use ? its like 5 times the cost of the Concept 2 Erg.
Even when I compare the RowErg to current Gym machines, they are much more robust. In my small sample size of my local gym, I see A-Brand machines (treadmills, bikes, elliptical machines, etc.) recieving the same extreme low maintenance regime. Most machines are much younger than the Model D's (I guess the D's are way over over 18 years old, other around 10 years), but the other equipment's paint is cracked, they have rust forming on critical connection points, frequently used buttons on the monitor have worn out, etc.. Now the rowers could benefit from being less popular, but the rust and paint issues would still appear. So I would even state that their durability surpasses most professional gym machines.