How hard it is to break one of those?l beIieve they onIy break if you drop them and the handIe hits the fIoor, right?What do l need to do if l want it to Iast 10 years or more?l'm asking because my shithoIe country approved new taxes on non-essentiaI industriaIized foreign products and everything is about to get more expensive. We import this stuff from America and China, so l'm pIanning to buy a heavy kettlebell (36kg or 40kg) and keep it in my basement to when l decide to hit heavier weights.
You should worry more about the floor than the kettlebell. I can guarantee you won't break it by accident.
>>75473175Thank you.
>>75473115your use of I instead of l is pissing me offplease dont do that anymore
>>75473115>How hard it is to break one of those?Not hard at all, 60 seconds with an angle grinder
that kettlebell looks MIGHTY peculiarme and the boys will break him in real good, don't you worry
I bet if you had one in each hand you could smash them together and either break them or a finger really quickly.
>>75473115Many people I know own kettlebells made in USSR. I think they'll outlast the current Russia too.
Any good kettlebell is single cast iron. Avoid kettlebells with welded on handles and you won't have any accidents
>>75473115If the whole thing is solid cast iron, it'll break everything else before it does. Even if you set out to break it, it'll bend. Iron is relatively malleable. Far more likely to bend before breaking and a bent kettlebell is still going to most likely be functional.