New Release
BASILISK
Sit down, pull a pin, train. Commercial-gym feel in a garage footprint — and a strength curve they spent years dialing in.
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STRENGTH MACHINES · THE LEG DAY LINEUP
FINISH YOUR GYM WITH
LEGS.
The machines that finish your gym — heavy leg training your back can handle, on the smoothest resistance curves out there.
The Case For Machines
Why Your Best Leg Day Starts With A Machine
Load lands where you're strongest. No bar fighting your hips, no dead spot at the top — every rep counts.
Train heavy without loading your spine. The #1 reason lifters past 40 keep squatting — just off the bar.
No spotter, no bar to bail. Push the last rep that actually grows muscle — then step out, safe.

Focus Machine · 3-In-1
One Frame.
Three Machines.
The Pandemonium Squat swaps between a pendulum squat, a calf press, and a standing Viking press in seconds — the Viking press alone replaces a whole landmine setup.
What's a pendulum squat? The smoothest strength curve in the squat family — brutal on the quads, gentle on the spine, almost impossible to do with bad form.
BOS PICK
The Leg Day You Actually Look Forward To
Two heavy lifts in one footprint. Leg press for volume, hack squat for depth — the leg day you stop dreading and start scheduling.

The Full Lineup · 7 Machines
Every Leg In One Place
BOS Pick
New Release
BOS Pick
BESTSELLER



Leg Extension & Belt Squat · Head To Head
Stack It Or Load It
Two ways to train legs with no bar on your back. The Basilisk sits you down and isolates quads and hamstrings on a selectorized stack. The Belt Squat stands you up and loads the whole squat pattern — plate-loaded, with band pegs to shape the curve. Pick how you want to train.
New Release
Sit down, pull a pin, train. Commercial-gym feel in a garage footprint — and a strength curve they spent years dialing in.
BESTSELLER
The full squat range of motion, no bar on your spine. The load hangs from your hips, so you train quads, glutes, and hamstrings in one compound movement — heavy, on the days a barbell back squat would wreck you. Plate-loaded, so it builds legs using the weight you already own.
You Asked → We Weighed It
Is 225 On The Belt Actually 225?
Short answer — yes, near enough. The load hangs straight down through a low pulley, so what you load is what you lift, minus a few pounds of carriage.
We hooked a luggage scale to the load arm and pulled — the number on the screen is the real one. It's the most-asked question we get, so we stopped guessing and measured it.
Before You Buy
Quick Answers
Both isolate the quads, but the pendulum squat keeps your torso more upright with a fixed arc, while the hack squat travels on a straight rail at a fixed angle. The pendulum tends to feel easier on the lower back.
The belt squat loads through your hips instead of your spine, making it the most back-friendly option of the lineup.
No — bands are optional. The belt squat works fully with plates alone; bands just let you add accommodating resistance if you want it.
Yes. Adjustment points accommodate lifters from roughly 5'3" to 6'2".
The frame weighs in around 150 lb empty before you add any plates.
What Lifters Say
The Last Piece A Gym Needs
Leg machines were the last thing my gym needed. Now it's done — and I actually use this more than the rack.
My back tapped out of barbell squats at 41. On the belt squat I'm loading heavier now than I did at 30.
I'd rather train legs at home now. Nothing at the commercial gym beats what I've got in the garage.
Financing Available
Big Legs.
Small Payments.
A serious leg machine shouldn't mean fronting the whole cost. Split any machine into low monthly payments — as low as $0 down — and build your gym one piece at a time.