I installed it myself, even the lift bracket underneath the belt. It was a bit dangerous installing that lift bracket. I cut 2x4s to the exact size that l needed to hold up the treadmill base while l installed the 🔩s for the hydraulic bracket (I wouldn't recommend anyone doing what l did). It took me a couple of hours to install it by myself. It really takes 2 people and actually someone fairly strong to hold up the treadmill belt base while you put the hydraulic bracket underneath the treadmill base. The Horizon elliptical l bought took me 3 hours to install myself, so l would say that this treadmill was not really difficult to install, but not really easy either.
Not specifically. most treadmills are not really designed for disassembly. Usually I'd recommend reversing the steps shown in the video. The main problem with doing it any other way is the wire harness. Only a few older models and incline trainers have a wire that disconnects at the base of the upright. If you try to move the uprights and console as one part you should feed a fish line down the upright with the wire harness so it can be reconnected and fed back up when reassembling.
I installed it myself, even the lift bracket underneath the belt. It was a bit dangerous installing that lift bracket. I cut 2x4s to the exact size that l needed to hold up the treadmill base while l installed the 🔩s for the hydraulic bracket (I wouldn't recommend anyone doing what l did). It took me a couple of hours to install it by myself. It really takes 2 people and actually someone fairly strong to hold up the treadmill belt base while you put the hydraulic bracket underneath the treadmill base. The Horizon elliptical l bought took me 3 hours to install myself, so l would say that this treadmill was not really difficult to install, but not really easy either.
By chance do you have a disassembly video to prepare the treadmill to move to another room?
Not specifically. most treadmills are not really designed for disassembly. Usually I'd recommend reversing the steps shown in the video. The main problem with doing it any other way is the wire harness. Only a few older models and incline trainers have a wire that disconnects at the base of the upright. If you try to move the uprights and console as one part you should feed a fish line down the upright with the wire harness so it can be reconnected and fed back up when reassembling.
This episode was funny for like the first half, second half it got hard to watch
I have installed a million things but this was was not an easy installation.
I hope the video helped make it easier than it could have been :)