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| Homemade Martial Arts Training Equipment: A Do-It-Yourself Guide | 
enlarge | Author: Michael D. Janich Publisher: Paladin Press Category: Book
List Price: $20.00 Buy New: $11.99 You Save: $8.01 (40%)
New (16) Used (3) from $11.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 549748
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 112 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 11 x 8.5 x 0.3
ISBN: 158160341X Dewey Decimal Number: 796 EAN: 9781581603415 ASIN: 158160341X
Publication Date: July 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New softcover. Receive discounted shipping when you order this at the same time as other book/s from us! Our books ship 6 days a week, well-packaged. West Coast, APO, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico should opt for "expedited" shipping or be patient with shipping time. We don't include packing slip unless requested (to save paper!) Thanks! We strive to provide the best possible customer service.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description If you've priced commercial martial arts equipment lately, you know you could easily spend a small fortune amassing the gear you need for effective at-home training - and still not have exactly what you need. The good news is, you can make your own for a fraction of the cost. Author Michael Janich is an old hand at turning out homemade martial arts equipment. In this book he shares the best of his simple yet ingenious designs, providing step-by-step instructions for fashioning functional, durable gear from ordinary materials at nominal cost. The plans in this book cover a wide variety of home-built martial arts equipment, from heavy bags and speed bags to focus pads and air shields to sparring weapons, stretching machines and more. Whether you're on a tight budget or just enjoy the satisfaction of do-it-yourself projects, this book shows you that a little ingenuity and sweat equity can go a long way toward greatly enhancing your home training regimen.
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| Customer Reviews:
Very disappointing work from a good author July 1, 2008 I have several Michael Janich books and DVD's, all except this one are great. This one is really crap.
In this book, there was no real depth. All of the items he shows how to build ANYONE with ANY imagination at all could build. There isn't any craftsmanship, or even clever ideas to the equipment shown in the book. An example: the heavy bag construction was buying an old army duffle bag, then putting old carpet padding in it, which would create a bag weighing roughly 10lbs with absolutely no firmness for striking.
None of the equipment would not hold up to the abuse of hard training and most wouldn't last through an 8 year old girls pillow fight.
WORST How-To-Book EVER WRITTEN!!! September 7, 2006 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
The book is so thin it would make a lousey paperweight, many of the pages have huge black and white photographs which might have been some effort by the publisher to increase the size of "book." You'ld need little imagination to top this guys sorry gadgetry - used tires, plywood, pullies & rope. Had expected at least a minimal level craftsmanship for equipment someone would want to use everyday. Can't imagine how many people died trying not to bust out laughing at the author when he "proudly" displayed his "workmanship" to anyone.
The lesson is more valuable than the plans. May 15, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
On your path to knowledge, mastery of your art, enlightenment or the furthering of any goal, let nothing be an obstacle, merely another challenge.
The most important thing about this book is the fact that it changes your mind-set and starts you towards thinking creatively. Where there is a will there is a way. A lack of funds is nothing but a lame excuse. Mas Oyama used no expensive equipment to become "God Hand". Mushashi slew opponents with a whittled down boat oar. I gave one star for this lesson alone.
For the equipment plans themselves, well...the designs presented are better than nothing. But you will, in some cases need specific skills to execute them. I, personally cannot sew and therefore am helpless before the daunting spectre of The Inner Tube Air Shield and The Heavy Bag.
I also thought The Heavy Bag design looked weak, not affording a solid enough surface or sufficient resistance. The dummy knives appear almost as big as clubs. I gave one star for The Stretching Machine. It delivers at a fraction of the commercial price, but still requires some above rudimentary skills and a cash outlay.
Other than that, there's really nothing earth-shattering here that you couldn't have formulated on your own. My best advice, learn to think creatively in your quest...or GET A JOB(!) so you can afford to buy the expensive stuff!
It's easy for this book to pay for itself August 11, 2004 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
When I attended one of Janich's classes, we used some of his home-made training knives. I bought this book then. Since then I've built a few of the projects that he describes in the book.
Many pieces of martial arts training equipment cost $50, $100 or $250 if you buy them new. If you buy this book and build even a couple of the projects you WILL save money when compared to buying the pre-built training equipment.
Even if it does wear out faster than factory-made gear, most of the designs are so inexpensive, you'll save money by building them a couple of times than buying them once.
-Chuck
Don't waste your money April 3, 2004 7 out of 16 found this review helpful
Don't waste your money on this book it didnt give me any useful information and half the stuff you build in this book would fall apart under heavy usage
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