Titan SSOBARv2_AMZ1 Check price on Amazon

Titan SSOBARv2_AMZ1 Barbell Review

4.7 (101) Amazon rating$349.99100+ bought last month

Our verdict

The Titan SSOBARv2_AMZ1 is the most expensive bar in this comparison at $349.99, a 58-pound alloy steel bar carrying a 4.7-star average across 101 reviews and 100+ units bought last month, numbers that support its premium position for serious home lifters.

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Best for

Serious home gym owners who want a heavy-duty 58-pound Olympic-style bar and are prepared to pay a significant premium over accessory bars for the added weight capacity and steel construction that implies.

Skip if

Budget matters more than max load capacity, since at $349.99 this bar costs more than six times the Marcy SDC10.1 and over three times the CAP OBIS-86B, making it a poor fit for casual or occasional lifters.

  • Material Alloy Steel
  • Weight 58 Pounds
  • Priced 400% above the category median ($69.99 across 90 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.5/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.7/5

    4.7 average across 101 owner ratings

  • Popularity0.7/5

    101 owner reviews, fewer than most models here

The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other home gym and fitness equipment we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.

Overview

The Titan SSOBARv2_AMZ1 tops this comparison in price by a wide margin at $349.99, more than double the next most expensive bar covered elsewhere in this set. Its specs list alloy steel construction at 58 pounds, making it the heaviest bar in the entire comparison, well past the CAP OBIS-86B's 44 pounds and the LIONSCOOL LCLUK-FT-BLACK's 20 kilograms.

That weight and price combination points to a bar built for serious loading rather than casual accessory work, and the rating data backs up a positive reception: 4.7 stars across 101 reviews matches the Total 28800.00 Barbell's rating exactly, though on a smaller review base. A 101-review sample is modest compared to the thousands racked up by the CAP OBIS line, but it is enough to indicate the rating is not an outlier.

Demand sits at 100+ bought last month, ahead of the RITFIT, LIONSCOOL LCL-WBAR, and Total 28800.00 Barbell, all at 50+, though behind the CAP OBIS-86B's 400+ and OBIS-60B-3's 500+. For a bar priced at nearly ten times the entry-level Marcy SDC10.1, that level of sustained demand suggests a real market of buyers willing to pay for the extra weight capacity and steel build the specs describe.

Pros

  • Heaviest bar in this comparison at 58 pounds of alloy steel
  • 4.7-star average across 101 reviews, matching the Total 28800.00 Barbell's rating
  • 100+ units bought last month, ahead of several mid-tier alternatives
  • In stock despite its premium $349.99 price point
  • Alloy steel build suited to heavier, more demanding loading than lighter accessory bars

Cons

  • Priced at $349.99, more than six times the Marcy SDC10.1's $30.78
  • Review base of 101 is small next to the CAP OBIS-86B's 4,600 or Marcy's 6,077
  • 58-pound bar weight makes it the least portable option in this set
  • Demand of 100+ trails the CAP OBIS-86B (400+) and OBIS-60B-3 (500+) bought last month
  • Significant cost commitment for buyers not doing serious barbell training

Specifications

MaterialAlloy Steel
Weight58 Pounds

Performance notes

At 58 pounds of alloy steel, this bar carries substantially more mass than the standard 44 to 45 pound Olympic bar range seen elsewhere in this comparison, such as the CAP OBIS-86B at 44 pounds. That added weight typically comes from thicker shaft diameter or reinforced sleeves designed to handle heavier total loads without excessive whip, which matters most to lifters progressing into serious squat, deadlift, or bench numbers. The $349.99 price reflects that heavier-duty positioning rather than a general accessory bar, and it is priced well above every other bar in this comparison. For buyers specifically training toward higher loads, the spec sheet supports the premium; for lighter or occasional use, the weight and cost are likely more than necessary.

What buyers say

A 4.7-star average across 101 reviews is a solid outcome for a bar at this price point, matching the Total 28800.00 Barbell's rating exactly even though the review sample here is smaller. The 100+ bought-last-month figure is notable given the $349.99 price tag, since it shows a real base of buyers willing to pay a substantial premium and follow through with purchases on an ongoing basis, not just a handful of early adopters. Compared to lower-priced bars with larger review counts, this pattern, fewer total reviews but consistent recent demand at a high price point, suggests a smaller but committed buyer segment rather than mass-market appeal.

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Frequently asked questions

Why is the Titan SSOBARv2_AMZ1 so much more expensive than other bars here?

At $349.99 it costs more than six times the Marcy SDC10.1, which likely reflects its 58-pound alloy steel construction, the heaviest and presumably most load-capable bar in this entire comparison.

Is a 101-review sample enough to trust the 4.7-star rating?

It is smaller than some other bars in this set, but 101 reviews at 4.7 stars is still a reasonably sized sample, and the rating matches the Total 28800.00 Barbell's score on a comparable basis.

Does 100+ bought last month indicate strong demand at this price?

Yes, relatively speaking. At $349.99, selling 100+ units in a month is a meaningful demand signal, ahead of several lower-priced bars in this comparison like the RITFIT and LIONSCOOL LCL-WBAR at 50+ each.

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