Bells of Steel
Bells of Steel Hydra Power Rack
Bells of Steel's modular 11-gauge 3x3 rack system with a vast accessory line and laser-cut numbered uprights.
- Weight capacity:
- 1,500 lb
A four-post power rack is the safest way to train heavy alone: the safeties catch a failed rep on all four corners, not just behind you. These are the enclosed cages worth building a garage gym around, judged on upright gauge, hole spacing, and how deep their attachment ecosystem runs.
Bells of Steel
Bells of Steel's modular 11-gauge 3x3 rack system with a vast accessory line and laser-cut numbered uprights.
Force USA
A fully modular power rack you build piece by piece, with a deep accessory catalog and heavy 11-gauge steel core.
Rep Fitness
An affordable entry-level power rack with a real pull-up bar and safety bars that handles a beginner's whole barbell program.
Rep Fitness
Rep's flagship 11-gauge, 3x3 power rack with Westside hole spacing and a deep attachment ecosystem at a mid-tier price.
Rep Fitness
Rep's no-compromise 11-gauge mega-rack with 1-inch hole spacing top to bottom and the widest accessory catalog they make.
Rogue Fitness
The classic American-made Rogue power rack: 2x3 11-gauge steel, bolt-together build, and a footprint tuned for the garage.
Rogue Fitness
Rogue's flat-foot Monster Lite power rack: 11-gauge 3x3 steel that stands free without bolting to the floor.
Titan Fitness
Titan's value benchmark: an 11-gauge 2x3 power rack with Westside spacing that undercuts the big brands on price.
Titan Fitness
Titan's 3x3 flagship: 11-gauge heavy tubing and Westside spacing that closes the gap to premium racks for far less money.
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