Home Exercise & Fitness Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review (2024)

Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review (2024)

by Energyzonefitness


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When building out a home gym, we often focus on gearing up with power racks, barbells, weight plates, and dumbbells. However, bringing home one of the best weight benches, like the Super Bench Pro V2 from Ironmaster, can bring some additional versatility to your strength-training routine. For this Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 review, our tester hopped on to scope out the potential of this product, tackling bench presses, utilizing a variety of attachments, and adjusting the range of seat positions.

This adjustable bench has 11 different degrees of angled adjustment, allowing for incline, decline, upright, and flat positions. Our favorite part of the Super Bench Pro V2, though, is its compatibility with tons of useful attachments — this makes it ideal for lifters who are tight on space but still want a multifaceted centerpiece for their garage gym setup. Read on for our full Super Bench Pro V2 review, and for more on how we test products, check out the BarBend equipment testing methodology






Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2




Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2






Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2


This versatile weight bench comes with 11 lockout angles that support flat, incline, decline, and upright training. An enhanced version of the Super Bench Pro, V2 adds handle for easier transport, etched number angles, and a third adjustment for the bench’s included incline seat pad. 


Main Takeaways

  • This bench is an updated model from the Pro V1 (we’ve tested both), introducing an integrated handle to tilt and roll, a standard hybrid dual-width bench pad, numbering for angle adjustments, and more.
  • This versatile bench is compatible with Ironmaster PRO attachments that can help you add situps, dips, pull-ups, preacher curls (for some of the best bicep exercises), and more to your workout.
  • It weighs only 69 pounds — about the same as a cute wittle (endangered) sea otter — making it lightweight compared to other high-end benches, which can weigh twice as much. (1)

Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Specs

Price $499
Dimensions 17.2” H x 47” L x 22.5” W
Pad Dimensions 47” L x 12.25” W (tapers to 10.25” W)
Materials 11- and 12-gauge steel
Flat Weight Capacity 1,000lbs
Incline and Upright Weight Capacity 600lbs
Weight 69lbs
Angle Adjustments 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 and 85 degrees
Available Attachments Crunch sit-up, bar dip handle, seated press pad, chin-up bar, preacher curl, head extension, dumbbell spotting stand, cable tower, hyper core, and leg attachment
Warranty 10-year frame and components, 1-year on upholstery

“Any longtime gym-goer knows that weight benches can also be used for core exercises, seated shoulder press, incline/decline presses (if an adjustable bench), Bulgarian split squats, step-ups, hip thrusts, and more. They are more versatile than they seem on the surface, and for that, they’re a great buy in my book,” says BarBend expert contributor and certified personal trainer Amanda Capritto. The Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 takes this versatility a step further by providing the option to add-on a variety of attachments (for an additional cost).

This bench has the ability to replace even the best home gym setups in a compact way with accessories like a crunch attachment, chin-up bar, leg extension, and more. You can even hook this bench up with a standing cable tower to tackle lat pulldowns, upright rows, and shoulder raises. 

You may think we’re veering away from what this Super Bench Pro V2 can offer — “why are you harping on the attachments when I’m only considering the bench?” — but it’s truly a bench that’s ideally suited for someone who’s interested in some of these accessory offerings. If you’re completely disinterested in even considering the attachments, it’s like having a high-performance engine and never taking it out of first gear. Let that baby fly, or you may want to look elsewhere.

This bench has 11 degrees of adjustability, allowing the backrest to support decline, incline, and upright positions. While the backrest remains flat, there’s a seat attachment that can be adjusted between three positions or taken off completely. “These adjustments are made in a way I’ve never seen done on a weight bench before,” says our tester. “You tap your foot on a lever to adjust the angle of the bench, which is great when I’ve got a dumbbell or kettlebell in my hand.”

Pros