
Because in the end that means that you need less equipment to do a full workout which means you can do more in a smaller space. The more exercises you can do with a single piece of equipment, the better. In a home gym with limited space, I’m all for equipment that is multifunctional. Which exercises can you do with a wall mounted pulley tower? How much space depends on what you want to do of course. Don’t forget you need free space in front of the cable machine to actually be able to use it. Since the recommended ones are pretty small, that shouldn’t be too difficult. That does require you to have a bit of wall space available. If you’ve already got a power cage, it’s worth a look if there are compatible pulley towers but if there isn’t, you can always just mount a pulley tower to the wall. That will be a power cage from the same brand and in the same series of products as the tower. But, that requires you to have a power cage that’s compatible with the pulley tower. That ‘something’ can be a wall but in some cases it can also be a power cage. That means without mounting them to something else will make them fall over. That’s necessary because these are tall machines with a small footprint you apply lateral forces to.

You might have noticed that all of the machines mentioned here (except the Rogue) are wall mounted. Pulley tower dimensions list Brand Model Height Width Depth Load type Max load Notes Vanswe Wall mount 82.6 24 25 Plates 250 Height adjustable Fitness Reality X-Class 81 44 46 Plates 360 Only high and low pulleys Titan Pulley Tower v3 84.5 27 26.5 Plates 350 Height adjustable Titan Pulley Tower v3 Short 80.5 27 26.5 Plates 350 Height adjustable Rogue CT-1 108.5 60 52.5 Selectorized 250 Height adjustable Valor Fitness BD-62 80 24.5 25 Plates 200 Height adjustable
