Pros & Cons
Pros
| Cons
|
Detailed Review
First Impressions
When the delivery guys lugged this 65kg beast up to my third-floor apartment, I immediately wondered if I had made a mistake. The box was massive and assembly took me and my brother about 90 minutes. The instruction manual is decent but some Hindi translations are hilarious. Once set up though, it looks pretty sleek in my spare bedroom. The blue accents give it a gym-like feel.
How I Tested This
I have been using this treadmill daily for the past 7 weeks now. My wife runs 2km every morning before her WFH shift starts. I do brisk walking for 30 minutes in the evening. We also let my 68-year-old father try it at slower speeds. Testing happened during peak Delhi NCR summer with temperatures hitting 44 degrees outside, and we had 3-4 power cuts during this period. The room has a split AC but we also tested with just a ceiling fan to see how the motor handles heat.
Performance
The 6.5HP peak motor claim needs context because continuous duty is much lower, probably around 2HP. For home use by people under 90kg, it runs smooth. My father weighs 82kg and the belt never struggled. However, when I tried running at 14kmph at my 78kg weight, there was noticeable motor strain sound after 20 minutes. The auto incline feature works well and goes up to 15 levels. This is genuinely useful because manual incline treadmills are a pain to adjust mid-workout.
Now the massager, let me be blunt, it is basically useless. It vibrates like a cheap phone on silent mode. My wife tried it once and never touched it again. Classic example of brands adding features just for Amazon listing bullets.
Noise and Neighbors
This is where things get real for apartment dwellers. At walking speeds of 4-5kmph, it is acceptable. But anything above 10kmph and you can hear it in the next room clearly. Our downstairs neighbor uncle mentioned he can hear a humming during my wife’s morning runs. We now use a thick yoga mat underneath which helped reduce the vibration transfer.
Build Quality Concerns
The running belt feels good quality and the cushioning is decent on knees. But the side handles feel plasticky and the cup holder broke within 3 weeks. The display is basic but readable. Heart rate sensors on the handles are wildly inaccurate, showed 180bpm when I was casually walking.
Power Cut Reality
During our power cuts, the treadmill obviously stops but it remembers your session data which is nice. Restarts smoothly once power returns. No issues with voltage fluctuation since I use it with a basic stabilizer.
Value for Money
At around 35k, this competes with PowerMax and Cockatoo in the same range. The Cult branding gives some confidence on service since they have physical presence in metros. I registered a complaint about the cup holder and got a replacement part in 8 days which was acceptable.
Score Breakdown
| Motor Performance | 7.5/10 | |
| Build Quality | 7/10 | |
| Noise Levels | 6.5/10 | |
| Features and Display | 7.5/10 | |
| Value for Money | 8.5/10 |
Key Specifications
| Peak Motor Power | 6.5 HP |
|---|---|
| Maximum Speed | 16 km/hr |
| Maximum User Weight | 150 kg |
| Incline Type | Auto Incline (15 levels) |
| Running Belt Size | 510 x 1400 mm |
| Treadmill Weight | 65 kg approx |
| Warranty | 1 Year comprehensive |
| Foldable | Yes with hydraulic soft drop |







