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Review: Echelon Reflect Smart Fitness Mirror

This home gym offers a wide array of streaming video workouts on a handsome reflective screen.
smart mirror
Photograph: Echelon Fitness
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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Large selection of live classes and on-demand workouts, plus one-on-one coaching if you want it. Well-designed warm-ups and cool-downs. Bright and colorful screen. Two sizes to choose from: a 40-inch model that you mount, or a 50-inch touchscreen model that can be wall-mounted or simply leaned in a corner. Good price.
TIRED
The superior touchscreen model is prone to fingerprints, which are distracting. Workout descriptions lack crucial information like a list of movements or necessary equipment. BYO weights and gear. Wall mount requires a professional, or at least some familiarity with power tools.

Fitness mirrors are a relatively new entrant to the world of home gyms. When turned off, these devices look like any decorative mirror, the type you’d hang near the door or lean against the wall next to your bedroom closet. When turned on, however, a fitness mirror comes to life and functions like an interactive digital display. It's similar to a smart TV, only one with a reflective surface that only plays instructional workout videos. You're likely familiar with the most popular names in this category like Tonal, Mirror, and NordicTrack's Vault. At their best, these Wi-Fi-connected mirrors serve as sleek, unobtrusive fitness centers, guiding you through a variety of workouts that get you into shape while you stay in the comfort of your own home.

The Reflect from Echelon Fitness is another of these mirrors. While its primary competitors sell their equipment in just one size, Echelon gives you two sizes of Reflect mirrors to pick from: a 50-inch touchscreen model for $1,500 and a 40-inch model without a touchscreen for $1,000. In addition to the physical mirror, users pay a $40 monthly membership fee to get Echelon's streaming content to play on the Reflect. It’s pricey, sure. But the total cash outlay is on the lower end for connected home fitness systems, especially compared to what the other popular brands offer. This competitive pricing is typical of Echelon Fitness, which also makes budget-friendly stationary bikes, rowing machines, and treadmills.

The mirror can stream a dizzying amount of live and on-demand workout classes, including meditation, boxing, cardio, strength, barre, and Zumba classes. There are also multi-workout programs and challenges, a beginner section, and even classes in German and French in addition to English. I thought doing a few classes in German could act as a fitness version of Duolingo, but so far, Ich spreche immer noch kein Deutsch. The one-on-one training option allows a personal trainer to see you (via the camera built into the Reflect) and lead you through personalized workouts. There is also a Celebrity section, which consists of classes led by—you guessed it—celebrities. Mario Lopez is the only celebrity Echelon has recruited thus far, but hey, A. C. Slater’s a good start.

Echelon’s Reflect is a newer entry within this category, and it’s impressive in the way it combines high-end tech with a simple design. I tested the 50-inch model, which was just large enough to forgo mounting it on the wall. Instead, I was able to lean it into a corner of my room, where it added a nice decorative touch when I wasn’t using it. The mirror's frame also houses two speakers and the hidden front-facing camera. The Reflect also connects with wireless headphoness and heart rate monitors over Bluetooth.

The workouts become more valuable if you connect a heart rate monitor, as Echelon's software measures your heart rate and tracks it across different zones, giving a score to each zone. Scores range from 5 HR points for every minute in the light green zone (which indicates light exertion) up to 20 HR points for every minute spent in the red zone (your maximum heart rate). At the end of workouts, a leaderboard ranks you against fellow Echelon devotees to show who earned the most points.

Pump It Up

Tap to select your workout on the touchscreen Reflect model.

Photograph: Echelon Fitness

When I turned it on, the Reflect immediately transformed from a simple mirror into a portal to a full-fledged fitness studio. The main menu screen presented me with a selection of classes from each of the various fitness programs. You can just tap and swipe around until you find something you like. (The smaller, non-touchscreen Reflect is controlled by a mobiles app, which is available for both androids and ioses.) There are up to 10 live classes every weekday, with fewer on the weekends. If your schedule doesn’t sync with any live classes, you can choose from the many on-demand replays of classes that last anywhere between five to 80 minutes apiece.

The workouts themselves are put together well. During the classes, you can see the coach as well as your reflection, allowing you to (ahem) mirror your coach’s movements and dial in your form as you go. Echelon’s coaches are also encouraging and enthusiastic, and it’s refreshing to see coaches with a wide range of body types. If you’re the kind of person who’s intimidated by a jacked trainer shouting instructions at you, you’ll find it relieving to work with coaches who have more attainable physiques.

The coaches would occasionally stumble over their words, but it never disrupted the flow of the workout or caused any significant distractions. Considering that these workouts are recorded live in one take, the roughness is not a huge nit, but one I still managed to pick.

The workouts tend to be paced in the same manner: a slow warm-up, followed by rising intensity, then a cool-down and recovery period. During a 20-minute bodyweight class, I started the first few intervals thinking that the workout may be too easy for experienced athletes. But as it progressed, I found myself increasingly out of breath, sweating, and pushing to keep up. Finally, the training ended with a short period of stretching and cooling down. I’m generally too spent at the end of a workout to follow through with stretching, so I appreciated the guidance.

Showing Cracks

The touchscreen is nice, but it also means you’re touching a mirror repeatedly, often with sweaty digits. Unsurprisingly, this leads to a lot of fingerprints accumulating on the Reflect’s surface. The touchscreen is pretty easy to clean, but you’re going to have to wipe it down after every session if you want to keep it pristine.

The individual workout descriptions are too often lacking. For example, it would be nice if the descriptions of each video also included a list of the equipment you'll be using during the class, especially since the Reflect doesn’t come with any external gear. A class description might mention that weights are needed, but not which weights. Even the strength classes, which prioritize dumbbell exercises, fail to mention what weights you’ll be working with. This will leave you scrambling if you don’t have a dedicated workout space with a good selection of dumbbells lying around. I ended up leaving a row of dumbbells of varying weights right next to me whenever I started a strength workout.

Rather than providing crucial info like a list of movements or necessary gear, each workout displays the length of the video and a general description of the workout’s category. For example, when looking through HIIT classes, you'll encounter descriptions like, “HIIT: A high-intensity total body workout with intermittent bursts of vigorous activity mixed with periods of rest to maximize the cardiovascular system.”

All of this makes choosing your workouts a bit of a guessing game. 

Upon Reflection
Photograph: Echelon Fitness

The Reflect takes up very little floor space (or zero floor space if you mount it on a wall) compared to a rower, bike, or treadmill. Also, it's much stealthier than those options. Until you turn it on, it looks and functions like a piece of nice home decor.

But the device's real strong point is the sheer volume of workout categories it offers, making it a truly comprehensive home fitness tool. There’s something here for just about anyone, including a meditation and mindfulness class and an entire low-impact category designed for people with disabilities. For folks who prefer bodyweight exercises or workouts with minimal weights, it offers an impressive level of variety. So whether you’re a regular at pilates or barre gyms or a beginner who doesn’t want to hop on the struggle bus in a public gym, the Echelon Reflect has a workout waiting for you, just a few taps away.

Billy Brown is a certified trainer and a fearless tester of fitness, sports, and outdoors gear. He's been writing reviews for WIRED since 2012. ... Read more
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