I have had the Rogue Donkey for almost 3 years. Overall this piece is incredible, and and very sturdy. I have loaded over 130kg in plates on the hyper and there is absolutely zero movement from the machine when im doing heavy hypers with momentum. The foot plate is easy to adjust, which is helpful because I use a different setting for sit ups, back extensions, and hypers. I do wish there was somehow the ability to switch the pop pin side, because the side that has the pop pin is towards the wall in my setup. There are very few drawbacks, the first being that there is absolutely nothing to help you get up from doing back extensions. If you went close to failure its hard to crawl your way back up from the bottom of the back extension if you are too tired to use momentum to get back onto your knees. The second frustrating feature is getting plates on and off. The space to get plates in between the weight horn and the frame is small and its easy to scratch your hand or the plates on some of the inward facing bolts. I would not reccomend using plates that do not have a grip because it can be awkward getting pates on and off of the weight horn. I personlly only have competition bumpers so loading it is incredibly annoying which has at times caused me to skip using them. I also wish the weight horn had a bearing because the plates spin in use and it wears like crazy. The weight horn spinning on a bearing would solve that problem instantly. I have also found myself using the collars INSIDE the plates to space them out, then a second set of axle collars to keep the plates from coming off. The Donkey definitely has its flaws, but overall, once its loaded the weight of the unit makes it perfect for the hypers, and the GHD function works fine as long as you get used to how to get out. I might find myself making a modification to add handles soon to solve the GHD dismount issue, probably drilling holes to add the monster lite plate posts along the front upright as handles.
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