Product Description
Get in a challenging cardio workout -- without ever leaving home -- with the ergonomic Schwinn® 250 recumbent bike. The BioFit™ feature ensures you'll pedal in total comfort with less lower back strain. BioDyne™ performance provides you with the realistic feel of an actual road ride. It's easy to set your goals and measure progress right on the console using the Schwinn® Advantage™ software.
| List Price: | $599.00 |
| Price: | $479.99 |
| as of Mon, 11 Mar 2013 05:13:03 GMT ***Remember, deals price on this item for sale just for limited time*** | |
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #9619 in Sports & Outdoors
- Size: One Size
- Color: one color
- Brand: Schwinn
- Model: 250
- Released on: 2011-09-15
- Dimensions: 12.00" h x 23.00" w x 38.00" l, .0 pounds
Features
- Recumbent exercise bike with 16 levels of resistance; designed to mimic the feel of road riding with reduced joint and back strain
- 17 preset programs (including profile and heart rate controlled programs); telemetry and contact heart rate monitoring; Schwinn Advantage workout journal
- Console includes: speakers and MP3 input; two speed fan; water bottle holder and utility tray; adjustable console angle for multiple users
- Thickly padded seat with side bolsters and lumbar support; oversized pedals with toe straps
- Perimeter weighted flywheel; convenient transport wheels; under seat storage; comprehensive warranty coverage
Amazon.com
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| The Schwinn 250 Recumbent Exercise Bike | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters, and lumbar support |
BioFit™ Comfort:
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| Get in shape from the convenience of your own home |
- Ergonomic, extra-wide seat
- Oversized, ergonomic pedal design
- Fore-aft and angle-adjustable console, with integrated blower fan, bottle holder and utility tray
- Speakers and MP3 music input port
BioDyne™ Performance:
- Perimeter weighted flywheel for a true road feel, and smooth, consistent workouts
- Oversized stabilizers and levelers that are built-in for a solid workout platform
BioConnect® Feedback:
- 17 preset programs including 8 profile courses, quick start, distance goal, fitness test
- 3 Polar® heart rate programs
- Extra large black backlit LCD window
- Schwinn Advantage™ workout tracking
- Polar® telemetry-enabled heart rate system
Features and Specifications:
- 16 resistance levels
- Perimeter weighted flywheel
- Eddy Current Brake (ECB) resistance system
- Retractable reading rack
- Water bottle holder
- Fan
- Speake
- Additional storage
- Rear stabilizer frame levelers
- Transport wheels
- Adjustable handlebars
- Switchable from miles to kilometers (KM)
- Fore/aft seat adjustment
- Oversized deluxe pedal
- Oversized saddle
- Maximum user weight: 275 pounds
Manufacturer's Warranty:
5 years on the frame, 1 year on the mechanical and electrical parts, 3 months on the wear parts.
Compare these Recumbent Bikes | |||||||
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Model | Schwinn A20 (2011) | Schwinn 220 (2012) | Schwinn 240 (2010) | Schwinn 250 (2011) | Nautilus R514 (2010) | Nautilus R514c (2013) | Schwinn 520 (2013) |
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MSRP | $299.00 | $499.00 | $599.00 | $599.00 | $699.00 | $699.00 | $999.00 |
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Number of Programs | 7 | 10 | 17 | 20 | 15 | 20 | 3 |
| Performance Tracking | No | No | Schwinn Advantage | Schwinn Advantage | Nautilus Advantage | Nautilus Advantage | No |
| Seat | Standard | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters and lumbar support | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters and lumbar support | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters and lumbar support | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters, lumbar support and adjustable back | Contoured seat bottom, side bolsters, lumbar support and adjustable back | Extra padded with ventilated seat back |
| Heart Rate | Contact | Contact | Contact | Contact and Telemetric enabled | Contact and Telemetric chest strap | Contact and Telemetric enabled | Contact |
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Display Type | LCD | LCD | Extra Large Blue Backlit LCD | Extra Large Black Backlit LCD with Multi-color Brickyard | Extra Large Blue Backlit LCD | Extra Large Black Backlit LCD with Multi-color Brickyard | Enhanced Resolution LCD |
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Resistance Levels | 8 | 16 | 16 | 16 | 16 | 16 | Infinite |
| Eddy Current Brake | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | N/A |
| Power | Battery (not included) | AC adaptor (included) | AC adaptor (included) | AC adaptor (included) | AC adaptor (included) | AC adaptor (included) | AC adaptor (included) |
| Other Features | Fan, Transport Wheels, Water Bottle Holder, Reading Rack | Speakers, Fan, Transport Wheels, Water Bottle Holder, Retractable Reading Rack | Transport wheels, Reading rack, Supply basket | Speakers, Fan, Transport Wheels, Water Bottle Holder, Reading Rack | Transport Wheels, Reading Rack, Water Bottle Holder | Speakers, Fan, Transport Wheels, Water Bottle Holder, Reading Rack | Single stage high torque belt drive, oversized footplates for multiple positions, non-intrusive console placement |
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Dimensions (L x W x H) | 61" x 17" x 41" | 55" x 25" x 52" | 63" x 25" x 46" | 63" x 25" x 46" | 68" x 26" x 52" | 63" x 25" x 46" | 62" x 28" x 40" |
| Product Weight | 60 lbs | 111 lbs | 117 lbs | 117 lbs | 120 lbs | 120 lbs | 120 lbs |
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Warranty | Frame: 2 years Mech/Elec: 6 months Wear Parts: 30 days Labor: N/A | Frame: 5 years Mech/Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 90 days Labor: 90 days | Frame: 5 years Mech/Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 90 days Labor: 90 days | Frame: 5 years Mech/Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 90 days Labor: 90 days | Frame: 10 years Mech: 2 years Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 6 months Labor: 6 months | Frame: 10 years Mech: 2 years Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 6 months Labor: 6 months | Frame: 5 years Mech/Elec: 1 year Wear Parts: 90 days Labor: 90 days |
| Maxium User Weight | 275 lbs | 300 lbs | 300 lbs | 300 lbs | 300 lbs | 300 lbs | 300 lbs |
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
138 of 140 people found the following review helpful.Great Exercise Machine (Excellent combination with kindle fire)
By Jack
Easy to setup and use. Very sturdy piece of equipment. Gives one a good workout. Comfortable and useful like some of the thousand dollar bikes. Slightly better than Schwinn 240 with additional programs and bigger console to rest your reading materials or Kindle/ipad etc. I was originally looking to buy Schwinn 240 but since 240 was getting discontinued decided to buy Schwinn 250 to make full use of warranty and service. I could not find a better price for this in local stores, Amazon had it delivered in three days with free shipping and no tax.
UPDATE Jan 20th, 2012 - I have been using this for a while now and it is awsome machine. I also use kindle fire while using it and this seems to be an excellent combo if you want to loose weight. I read books, magzines, watch movies, listen to music, check email and surf web and time flies by. I only intend to use this bike for 30 minutes but while using kindle fire I seldom finish in less than an hour. I am able to see difference in my weight in just weeks.
60 of 61 people found the following review helpful.Wow, Really? Schwinn 250, "meh"
By Andrew Kay
Schwinn 250 Recumbent Exercise Bike
Executive Summary: The Schwinn 250 is a decent set-up for the price. Check out the manual before you buy, especially the section describing the Heart Rate Control.
Summary: The Schwinn 250 is a pretty good recumbent exercise bike. I'm a little dissapointed in how the features list translates into actual features. The "3 polar heart rate programs" doesn't mean three seperate heart rate controlled programs. The manual, which you can find online, has only ONE program with THREE levels: 60%-70%, 70%-80%, and 80%-90%. I do not agree with the definition that a LEVEL is a PROGRAM! Cheaters! On the console, I also only find one HRC program. In my testing the heart rate control does work as advertised, the resistance adjusts to have my heart rate remain in the zone.
Long Version: I upgraded from a Vision 2100 recumbent exercise bike to the Schwinn 250 recumbent excersise bike. I choose the Schwinn 250 based on the reviews and the features list. Below I will talk about my previous recumbent exercise bike experience, how I use the recumbent, why I picked the Schwinn 250 and my first impressions with the Schwinn 250. After those I will discuss things I've learned while using the recumbent for a few months.
Me: I wore out the previous recumbent. I bought the Vision new in 1997. Some years I used it a lot and other years not so much. In 2008 I came up with a plan to start bicycling again that included achieving a fitness level before buying a bicycle. In 2009 I implemented the plan and completed 183 exercise sessions, at a minimum of 30 minutes per session. Near the end of 2009 the recumbent developed a click, which was the right side flywheel bearing moving around. In 2010 I bought a bicycle and used the recumbent less, however I would still train with the recumbent during the winter. The click would occur at the start of the session then go away after 5-7 minutes. The Vision also only came with a manual setting control panel as I was too, uh, frugal, to spend the extra to have the fancy, electronically controlled, control panel.
Workouts: My workouts on the old recumbent consisted of 30-60 minutes of a constant pace at a level that will put me in the 65%-75% of maximum heart rate. I'm sweating and I can still carry on a conversation. As I pedal I have my hands free to play video games on a flat screen that I've attached to the wall on a swing out stand. I only play video games when I'm exercising, so that motivates me to exercise and also makes the time go by pretty quickly.
Selection: I looked around on Costco.com, Sears.com and Amazon.com to see what models of recumbent were available. The Schwinn 250 appealed to me as the lower models didn't have heart rate controled profiles. The 240 does have heart rate control, and that requires the user to hold onto the handles. The 250 has "hands free" heart rate control and monitoring through the use of the Polar Chest Strap Transmitter. I've used HRC recumbents in a gym that required me to hold onto the handles and that was annoying.
My original recumbent cost around $800 as it was one of the first magnetic resistance models. I like the magnetic resistance as it is so quiet.
First Impressions: There were four things that I noticed right away.
1) Lack of a top bar
2) Oversized saddle means oversized saddle.
3) Solid construction
4) Only ONE heart rate program
1) My old recumbent had a top bar that connected the seat to the top of the flywheel assembly. The Schwinn does not have that bar. The lack of the bar makes it easier to get on the machine, allowing the user to walk through the space between the seat and the flywheel. As I was assembling the bike I was thinking that the lack of a bar might be okay. I was concerned that when I pushed on the left peddle that the seat would lean to the right and the flywheel would go to the left, and then when I pushed on the right pedal the flywheel would go to the right and the seat would go to the left.
And that does happen a tiny little bit. Might not be a problem and then again, over the years of use I expect to get out of the machine, maybe the metal will fatigue and the whole thing will fall apart. The frame is covered for 5 years, so no worries! Note: The machine is only rated for 300lbs or less. Website says 275, manual says 300. *shrug*
2) The oversized saddle is really oversized. When I pedal, the upper back part of my thigh touches the seat, then lifts off the seat, then touches the seat, then lifts off the seat... it's annoying. If I wear my bike shorts, then I don't notice it. So be aware of that.
3) Solid construction. Yes, there is a 5 year warranty on the frame, and the quality of the bolts and such means that there probably won't be very many claims for that.
4) There is only ONE heart rate controlled program. The features list clearly calls out "3 Polar(r) heart rate programs" I could only find ONE program with three levels. In this reguard I feel cheated. Cause with 16 levels of resistance and 8 profile courses, the manual doesn't say "128 fitness programs." The ONE program does have three levels: 60%-70%, 70%-80%, 80%-90%, so that must be what is being described in the features list. *mumble*cheaters*grumble*
Not So First Impressions: Okay, I've been using the recumbent for a couple of months now and I'm over the heart rate control deal. Turns out I mostly do what I was doing before, setting a level, riding the bike, adjusting the level manually.
1) Heart Rate Monitor is nice.
2) The inside of the control panel is mostly air
3) Fan blows
4) Speakers suck
5) HRC cool down sucks
6) Very very smooth
7) Load transitions suck
8) Basket is okay
9) 16 resistance levels are nice
10) Seat set-up is lame.
11) Time
12) Intervals
1) Heart Rate Monitor is nice. I like the hands free Heart Rate Monitor feature. I like to look down and see where I'm at.
2) The inside of the control panel is mostly air. There are buttons on the left and the right, however the actual display area is very small. The display is a little annoying when certain sections do double duty, flashing between one metric and another. RPM flashes with speed and all I really care about is RPM. Occasionally I look down, wanting to see RPM and I'll have to wait from 0-6 seconds to see the RPM.
3) Fan blows. As with other reviewers, I agree that the fan doesn't put out much air, even on the highest setting. And I kinda thought it would not perform well, given that the power is coming from a 9 volt input. I didn't base my buying decision on the fan.
4) Speakers suck. And I kinda thought they would, given that the power is coming from a 9 volt input. I didn't base my buying decsion on the speakers.
5) HRC cool down sucks. Okay, so now that I've figured out that there is only ONE heart rate control program, it turns out that it sucks due to a forced cool down section at the end of the work out. I put in a work out of 90 minutes, the first 9 mintues are warm up. The last 18 minutes are cool down. And since I'm playing my video game, I'm not paying attention to the cool down period. Then BLAM, the resistance goes away and I'm pedaling out of control. I don't even want a cool down. All the other programs have a cool down that starts AFTER the workout. GAH! I know what you're thinking, just skip the cool down. And I do. There is something about not finishing a workout that bugs me. Even if I plan to work out for 72 minutes and set the machine for 90 minutes, stopping at 72 minutes while there is still time left on the clock feels like I'm ending early.
6) Very smooth. The fear of the lack of a top bar is no longer an issue. The machine is very smooth. I've noticed that in the manual the pedal wheel is not the flywheel. A belt connects the pedal wheel to the flywheel. I'm hoping that the setup will last much longer than my previous setup.
7) Load transitions suck. Every time the load resistance is changed, the load backs off, removing the resistance, allowing me to overspin, which feels kind of like falling, and then the resistance comes back on at the new level. I'm prepared for the changes when I make the manual adjustment to the levels, however not for the changes during the HRC mode. (I'm hoping by this time you understand that I no longer use the HRC mode! :-)
8) Basket is okay. The basket is really nice for storing the manual and the tools that came with the bike.
9) 16 resistance levels are nice. I like having the 16 level resolution. I often work out in level 8 or 9. When I want to do wind sprints or Tabata, I move up a resistance level, wait for the level to take effect(see 7 above), then crank up the RPMs and then recover in the same level. For wind sprints, the delay in the changing of resistance makes different-resistance-level-wind-sprints impractical.
10) Seat set-up is lame. The "oversize" saddle is mounted onto a rectangular sleeve that fits over the smaller rectangular seat support bar. The seat sleeve "floats" on the seat support. Even with the adjustment knob turned all the way in, the seat rocks on the seat support. At first I thought I hadn't tightened the hand rails securely, but I did. The hand rails make great levers for rocking the seat in the gaps between the seat sleeve and the seat tube. So don't freak out if it happens to you, like when you drop a towel and lean over to pick it up and the seat "shifts" a little bit.
11) Time. The maximum workout time is 99 minutes. If you want to work out for two hours, it's better to set the timer for 60 minutes, write down your results, take a break, then another 60 minutes, then write down your results, then add those results to the previous workout results to get the total workout results. Cause that is WAY more convienient than being able to work out for 120 minutes! *ahem* Time also only counts down. There isn't a mode where you just start working out and the timer just counts up until you stop (like on my last bike).
11) Intervals. Every workout is divided into 10 intervals, cause that is how many intervals are on the display? Other machines I've used have allowed more intervals, with the intervals scrolling across the display. For example, let's say that a workout had 20 intervals. The display of 10 intervals would display the first 10 intervals. As intervals were completed, the display would change and show intervals 2-11, 3-12, 4-13, etc, then the last interval would go across the screen until it was gone, end of work out. So the screen having 10 intervals is no excuse to limit all the workouts to 10 intervals. And it's not really that bad. The only time it's confusing is when I'm trying to see how much time I have left in the workout and I look down and the interval time is showing. Then I have to wait from 0-6 seconds for the time to show.
So, in summary, knowing everything I know now I would still have purchased this recumbent.
Good Luck!
76 of 79 people found the following review helpful.Can an exercise bike be a delight and a dream come true.
By Jan in Salt Lake
I have a really "bad" back, and have had to give-up walking and going to the gym. By trial and error I eliminated every type of exercise that increased the pain. While I am not exactly "in love" with exercise, it has always kept my weight under control. And,I discovered without a regular form of exercise I didn't feel as well as I had, and I started to gain weight. In desperation, I tried my friends Schwinn 240. Using a recumbent bike, didn't hurt my back. It had many good qualities, but the seat wasn't quite as comfortable as I would have liked. I came to Amazon to order the 240, and was excited when I read there was a new bike, the Schwinn Recumbent model 250. I immediately ordered it. I was pleased when Amazon notified me that I could expect the bike between November 25, and December 13, 2011. The bike was delivered at 9:30 a.m. November 25, 2011. The box was in good condition & the bike parts appeared perfect.My husband immediately began assembly. It took about 3 1/2 hours, he followed the clear instructions, & having the parts individually labeled was an amazing help. I could not wait to try it out. I got on the bike moments after he had completed assembly, I found the seat to be exceptionally comfortable, it was enough wider that my husand could use it also. The higher seat back supported my back better than I could have dreamed. The seat also has a better comfort factor than the Schwinn 240. It operated so quietly that I could listen to t.v. or have a conversation and not miss a word. When I got up the next morning I felt I had discovered a miracle, my back hadn't gone into spasm during the night. I used it again today and I love, love it even more. Thank you Amazon.com for carrying quality products. It was an added bonus not to pay for shipping the bike Thanks again Amazon.com..
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