If you’ve ever worked with a good personal trainer, you know the difference immediately. It’s not just about telling you what to do—it’s about understanding how your body responds, how your energy fluctuates, and how to push you without breaking you. That’s exactly the mindset I’m bringing into this, because when I look at something like the Strive™ Air Bike, I don’t see a machine—I see a tool that either supports real progress, or wastes your time.
And most people? They’ve spent enough time already on equipment that looks impressive but delivers very little.
So let’s talk honestly, the way I would with a client standing in front of me.
The first thing I care about is whether something holds up under real effort. Not casual pedaling, not a five-minute warm-up—I mean the kind of sessions where your breathing gets heavy, your legs start to fatigue, and your form is the only thing holding everything together. That’s where most equipment starts to show its weaknesses. Movement becomes unstable, resistance feels inconsistent, and instead of focusing on your output, you start adjusting to the machine.
That’s a problem.
With this bike, that issue is removed right away. The frame feels planted, and that matters more than people realize. When your base is stable, your nervous system relaxes just enough to let you push harder. You’re not compensating, you’re not holding back—you’re actually training.
Now, let’s talk about resistance, because this is where most air bikes fall short in terms of programming flexibility.
Traditional air bikes tie everything to speed. You go faster, it gets harder. Simple, yes—but from a coaching perspective, it’s limiting. Because not every session should be dictated by how fast you can move. Sometimes I want controlled output. Sometimes I want sustained effort at a fixed intensity. Sometimes I want you working hard without turning the session into a sprint.
That’s where this system changes the game.
Being able to adjust resistance independently of cadence gives you structure. It allows me—as a coach—to prescribe specific effort levels without relying on guesswork. I can tell you to hold a pace, maintain power, and actually expect consistency. That’s how you build conditioning properly—not randomly, but with intention.


