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How to Mount VOLTRA I with AnyMount Accessories: Overview

Learn how VOLTRA I uses our AnyMount system to attach to racks, posts, and more.

Updated today

Mounting is the first step to getting the most out of VOLTRA I. The AnyMount accessories offer multiple ways to mount to racks, bars, and sturdy "non-gym" objects, so you can train at the height and angle you need, with a setup that stays secure under load.

This guide is your starting point. Use it to choose the right accessory, then open the dedicated guide for step-by-step setup and use.

The main AnyMount accessories

Wraps around sturdy objects like pillars, frames, beams, and even tree trunks for indoor, outdoor, or travel setups.

Clamps to a power rack and lets you move VOLTRA I up and down quickly for fast height changes.

Pins through rack holes and adapts to common rack hole sizes, giving you a tool-free rack setup.

A more permanent rack attachment that fastens with screws for a stable, always-ready mounting point.

Clamps to horizontal bars or round tubes when you need an overhead or crossbar mounting option.

A bar attachment designed for consistent setups on a compatible round bar, useful when you want a dedicated bar-based station.

A portable base that gives you a stable, low anchor point on the go, handy for movements like curls or deadlift-style pulls.

Handles and attachments

Extras like a Premium Carabiner, Functional Rope, Basic Handle, Ankle Strap, Squat Harness, and the Rotator Add-on to expand exercise options.

All of these mounts are designed to hold the device securely under load, so you can focus on training instead of worrying about the setup.

Choosing the right mount

If you have a power rack (home gyms, coaches, athlete support staff)

Start here. Rack-based mounting is usually the most stable and repeatable, but do check out the bar mounts too.

  • Sliding Rack Mount: Best if you change exercises and heights often. Great for moving quickly from rows to face pulls to pushdowns without a full reset.

  • Fixed Rack Mount: Best if you want "set it and forget it" simplicity, or if you are building a dedicated station in a home gym or facility.

  • Adaptive Rack Mount: A good middle option when you want quick, tool-free mounting through rack holes, especially across different rack styles.

If you travel, train in unusual locations, or need a portable station (home users, coaches, clinicians)

  • Strap Mount: The most versatile option for flexible training locations. Think hotel gyms, outdoor posts or trees, or clinics and shared training spaces.

  • Travel Platform: Best when you want a consistent, stable base while travelling, especially for lower starting points and floor-based setups.

If you want overhead, horizontal-bar, or mid-air mounting (pulldown angles, rehab positions, athletic patterns)

Bar Mounts (Adaptive or Fixed) are ideal when you want the cable line to come from above or from a fixed horizontal point.

For coaches and pro athlete support staff, this is a fast way to create stations for pulldown patterns, chops, lifts, and sport-specific lines of pull. For physiotherapists, it can help standardize positions so progressions are more consistent session to session.

Installation tips

No matter which mount you use, take a moment before every session to check a few important things:

  1. Tighten and align. Make sure the mount is fully secured and not sitting at an angle that could shift once tension hits.

  2. Confirm VOLTRA I is locked onto the mount. The device locks onto mounts magnetically. You should feel and hear a "click," and you may also see an on-screen confirmation that it is seated and locked. If you're not sure, remove it and mount again.

  3. Think about the real weak link: the surface. The mounts may be tested for the full 200lbs resistance, but your anchor point still needs to handle that load safely. A strap can tighten around a door, but that doesn't mean the door frame is a smart idea at heavy resistance. Start light, check for movement, then build gradually.

  4. When in doubt, choose the more stable option. For home gyms, that usually means rack mounts if you have them. For clinicians, prioritize the most repeatable station. For coaches, pick the option that keeps transitions fast without sacrificing stability.

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