GravoMax Fitness · New Zealand

Conditioning Equipment (NZ) — build engine, power, and clean session flow

Shop conditioning equipment NZ built for functional training, group classes, and serious home setups.
This range covers training bags, slam balls, medicine balls & wall balls, battle ropes & climb ropes, and sleds — ideal for Hyrox-style sessions and everyday conditioning blocks.

We offer NZ-wide delivery. Prefer pickup instead of freight? Choose pickup when you check-out.

23kg/50lb Strongman Sandbag Unfilled

Original price was: $89.00.Current price is: $71.00.

34kg/75lb Strongman Sandbag Unfilled

Original price was: $99.00.Current price is: $79.00.

45kg/100lb Strongman Sandbag Unfilled

Original price was: $115.00.Current price is: $92.00.

68kg/150lb Strongman Sandbag Unfilled

Original price was: $125.00.Current price is: $100.00.

3KG Slam Ball

$22.00

4KG Slam Ball

$29.00

5KG Slam Ball

$34.00

6KG Slam Ball

$40.00

7KG Slam Ball

$43.00

8KG Slam Ball

$45.00

Shop by category
Training Bags
Carry, clean, and ground-to-shoulder work for full-body conditioning.
Slam Balls
High-output slams, carries, and quick conditioning finishers.
Medicine Balls & Wall Balls
Throws, wall shots, and full-body pacing for class programming.
Battle Ropes & Climb Ropes
Upper-body endurance, grip work, and team-style conditioning.
Sleds
Push/pull power work for athletes, studios, and Hyrox-style blocks.

What to buy first
Home conditioning starter
Start with a slam ball or training bag for simple, high-output sessions in limited space.
Studios / group training
Add wall balls and sleds to build smooth class flow and scalable conditioning blocks.

Popular conditioning blocks
  • Carry + slam finishers (bags / slam balls)
  • Wall shot pacing and interval work (medicine balls / wall balls)
  • Rope intervals for upper-body endurance (battle ropes)
  • Sled push/pull strength-endurance blocks (sleds)

FAQs for Conditioning (NZ)
Fast answers for buyers shopping conditioning equipment and functional training gear in New Zealand.

Which conditioning items work best for small spaces?
For compact areas, start with slam balls and training bags. They deliver high output without requiring a large footprint.
What is the difference between medicine balls and wall balls?
Wall balls are commonly used for repeated wall shots and class pacing. Medicine balls are often selected for throws, carries, and mixed drills — choose based on your programming style.