Well, I guess having a big sack doesn’t do ya’ much good if you can’t get it up!
ROFLMAO!!! (Couldn’t resist!
).
if you plan on hitting like a grandma, then 70lbs is fine. but im not the first to call you a meow*
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idk go 160 jsut so you dont have to buy another bag after the 100 one. do it right the first time, f the upgrading to different bags.
you guys are all pussies. just hit a concrete wall like i do.
Phah! Concrete’s too soft! I just use the Pan Qingfu method! Thick iron plates baby!
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Yeah, it’s not going to be hung. I guess my only option is to get one of those corner hanger things. But how will I explain that to guests when they come over? ![]()
Stupid gym not having a punching bag.
Oh dude you guys, what about something like this? Can that be mounted to studs???
Originally posted by IronFist
But how will I explain that to guests when they come over?
When people complain in Iron’s house, Iron hangs them from the meathooks in the frame :mad: Fear Iron!
here's another kind. what do you think?
Well, it’s not your house so you don’t care. But if I were your neighbours I’d probably be pissed off at thumping in the frame. If it were my house I’d also be worried about something heavy attached to the frame (wall or roof) that was continually jolting about. I’d prefer a purpose built frame or something cheap to fix, but I have a yard. When/if I get a heavy bag I’ll probably weld one myself like all those free-standing ones.
Or what about this? Would this let you hang one by a ceiling stud?

Easily screws into any Wood beam.
Will handle any size heavybag.
Are you allowed to drill large holes in walls/ceilings? If not I’d be worried come rent inspection day. What’s above your apartment? I’d still go with a heavy-duty welded frame. Make it yourself or get a friend to weld it up. Or talk to a machine shop. Doesn’t have to be “nice”, just some cheap steel cut to size and stuck together. Paint it up and away you go. Maybe stick some strips of rubber underneath to absorb shock.
Originally posted by Toby
If it were my house I’d also be worried about something heavy attached to the frame (wall or roof) that was continually jolting about.
well it wasn’t my house, but for about 2 and a half years i had a 70lb bag hanging from an x support between two floor boards in the basement. i only had one break and it was a night that i was upset about something going on at work. i just moved it over to the next x support and never had another problem. my point is that if an x support handled the abuse some studs or what not should be fine. a bigger bag might make a difference, but if anything i figure it would be less abuse since it wouldnt jolt around as much as a lighter one.
we should be moving into our new house in the next two weeks, and while i wont get to use it for about a year, my 100lb bag is going to be hung in the garage. the old 70lb one will get hung up somewhere for satan … he likes to attack it.
man :rolleyes:
some of the comments I am readin here tell me that few of you have actually got much experience with actually “hitting” anything. lol.
Unless of course you’re all super mech robots of incredible strength and I’ve spent 10 years just working out with 4 year old girls…which I am doubtful of.
I train with guys now that I swear some of them eat nails, and you guys are talking smack according to what I know to be true.
dude, a 70 lb bag is a good bag to train with, heck, a 40 lb bag is ok. use bag gloves though, not so much for your hands as to keep the bag in good shape.
at the very least use wraps.
dude, jsut find a bum on bum fights and practice hitting him. nothing compares to the real thing ![]()
i hear what your saying to a degree kl, but my bag was all over the place when i worked it. and no i wasn’t pushing it. at least not most of the time. i didn’t really see it as a bad thing as i worked my stepping as well while chasing the bag around.
then again, the x supports the bag was attached to were on a 12 foot cealing so the bag was hanging by around 8 feet of bungie so that might have had something to do with it. with a real chain and setup it wouldnt have been moving nearly as much.
If your bag is on a swivel and chain it shouldn’t move to much…that is if you aren’t pushing the bag too much and are folding it instead with your strikes.
It will move a bit at 70, I mean hey, it is seventy pounds, but that is plenty of resistance.
Move around the bag and use a variety of punches, stop the bag from swaying now and again.
Bungee chords add movement. Heavy springs, will not add too much but will deaden sound a little.
In an apartment, a heavy bag will only bring you neighbourly or landlordly grief…
less you can hang it in the sound proof laundry room or sumpin…
My 80 pounder is good all around, but I think it would be better full of sand, or the corn like Sifu Abel sugjests. I can’t imagine working wiht anything lighter than the 80 though. I had access to a 70 once, and it was ok, but it was still too light. My 80 is a bit on the light side too for that matter. My almost 500 pounder is really to heavy for anything other than high powered side kicks.
A freind has a sand filled bag we guestimated to be around 150. That was about perfect for me. It was a bit on the hard side, so I like to use an Iron hand Jow when I punched it. Russ on the other hand hit it raw and rocked the stuffing out of it. Those Marines grow em strong for sure.