Orders placed on October 29, 2024 will start shipping by . If already purchased refer to your order confirmation for ship date.
Add durable weights to your home gym that are also good for the environment with REP’s Hi-Temp Bumper Plates. These plates are made from recycled, vulcanized rubber, making them environmentally friendly. Plus, vulcanized rubber is stronger than traditional rubber and can handle more stress and pressure.
Add to that a 2” stainless-steel insert, and you’ve got some incredibly tough plates. Because these are made from recycled rubber, they are much quieter than iron plates and safer for your floors. The Hi-Temp Bumper Plates are made in the USA, manufactured in Tuscumbia, Alabama. They have a 17.5” diameter, except the 5lb plates, which are 14.25”. Width varies by size.
-
Diameter5lb: 14.25"; 10-45lbs: 17.5"
-
Width5lb: 1"; 10lbs: 1.4"; 15lbs: 1.9"; 25lbs: 2.25"; 35lbs: 3.1"; 45lbs: 3.75"
BLOGS
Bumper plates are manufactured to withstand drops onto the floor, which is desirable for Olympic weightlifting (snatch, clean and jerk, hang cleans), where you often drop the plates onto the ground. Iron plates are better for lifts that do not involve the weights hitting the ground (such as bench press, squats, and curls), because they can cause damage to the floor, the barbell, and to the plates themselves.
Hi-Temp Bumper Plates have a 2” Olympic-standard inner diameter and will fit 2” Olympic-sleeved barbells.
When bumper plates arrive, unpack and let them air out for a few days to allow any odor, however faint, to air out.
To extend their life span, try to drop plates as close to straight down as possible. If your bar collars get loose during a workout, try to retighten them so your plates always land straight up and down. This will lessen the sideways force on the bumper plate insert. Also, flooring with some type of give (like heavy-duty rubber mats or a weightlifting platform) will help absorb some of the impact from dropping the plates.
We do not recommend this, because iron and bumper plates can have slightly different diameters, meaning all the force from dropping the weights goes into the larger plate, causing those plates and your barbell to wear more quickly. It is best to keep all plates on your bar the same type.